THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA.,, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1898. THE DISSOLUTION SALE AT BP ————— a mm ——— BAC Is still in progress and as lively as the first day it be- | gan. Although the sale so far has been phenomenal THE BIG STOCK shows a few bare spots. New Bargains are placed on the Counters daily as room is found to display em. Nothing is reserved. Every i thing must be sold. {G. R.SPIGELMYER. JR {SHEM SPIGELMYER RUNVILLE RIPPLINGS Boyd Myrtle Uniouvill Rev. meeting, much suc Mrs smile, from the Mis spendin ents, Mr. and Mrs.’ Miss bury learning has returned to stay, ¢ good enough to stand the A from this pl local institute, at | evening young lady on his mumps and now he has § Willis Witherite, in the express office at short time, now at home. We have been informed that he has come tu We judge that he has learned to know there is no place like home. The republican caucus meeting held in Central City last Saturday. course they did not have offices for alli the office seekers and quite a breezy time is reported. The candidates are as far as learned : Jerry Heverly for supervisor, Mr, —— Derr for overseer of the poor and Wm. Fisher for assessor. The demo- cratic caucus will be held next Saturday, at the same place. ng a few days wit men held who had it in the neck. 3 3 een engaged of UU whol Osceola, for a is ‘ y Stay was Of - To Cure Constipasion Forever, Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic 10¢ or $5e. it C C C. fail to cure, druggists refund money AARONSBURG. Miss Katie Schreffler, of Centre Hall, is visiting at Clayton Wyles Mis. Lester Moyer, Hall, circulating among her friends for a few days. Wesley Adams, of Mifflinburg, Sunday- ed at the of Thos. Hull, on North 2nd street. The Misses Katie and Maggie Cather- man, Buffalo Run, were the guests of John Yarger a few days last week of Penn is rectdence resiaence of Thos. Weaver and John Gettig, return. ed home after attending a week's conven. tion at Jacksonville. They say they will always remember the people of Jackson- ville for their hospitality, which they showed toward them The remains of Dr. D. J. Shoemaker, of Washingtonville, Pa., were brought here on Thursday afternoon. He was burried in the Reformed cemetery. He leaves to moarn his loss a’ wife and little son, and his aged-widowed mother and two sisters Mrs. T. M. Stephenson, of Lock Haven ; and Mrs. Rev. Carlin, Sunbury ;: and only one brother Herbert, of Watsontown The funeral were held in the Reformed church on Thursday evening. Rev. F. W. Brown preached a very sermon, He was assisted by Rev. George, of Rebersburg, of services able No-To Bae for Fifty Centa Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure oe. £1. All druggists RESOLUTIONS Wnes ber of Mutus : eounty. Tor mors whe by his honesty al ible adherence to right, by ance of duly, and zealous working fo interests of the Company. bas endeared him self to all the members of this Board. and to the patrons of the Company generally, and now, in the declining years of his life, and at a meeting of the Bay held the 2h day of December last, gave notice that be would no longer be a candidate for re election Therelore, i Resolead, That we, the members of said | Board do sincerely regret to lose so valuable a member. That we highly appreciate the ser vices rendared during his official capacity, and | that we reluctantly receive this his ultimatum | notice to retire from the Board That these resotutisns be entered on the min utes of the board, published in the Centre Hall Reporter, and Centre Democrat, and a copy sent to the retiring member Mr, Gramley, H. E DUCK J. BOTTORYF, JASPER BK. BRUNGART, ! « falthiu thie CORRESPONDENTS DEPARTMENT The News Gathered From Various HAPPENINGS Sections IN What Our Army of Alert Correspondents See and Observe Worthy of Note—The Local Happenings of Every Community Will be Gladly Published Send the News, We will Publish it. MINGOVILLE. le SAIC J. S. Walkey expects to have a about the middle of February. We have been haying real spring weather, for the last week or more, Joel Barner and wife, of near Belle. foute, spent Monday at John Smith's, Noah Breon will move from the Gram- ley farm to the William Miller farm south of Valentine's furnace in the spring Mr. Wendle Bartholomew and sister, Rena, ot Nittany, were pleasant callers at the hospitable home of Mr, and Mrs M. M. Zong. The Zimmerman Brothers have again resumed operation, after a few days off, r » ’ oun account of a dispute a i ana they have been oper Lewis Deit and wife ga y in behalf of their Wednesday [here on cts to go south about the 1st f this Biot CASON Ss with Next Saturday afternoon, January the democrats will hold their us nominating can respec tive township offices, at the Hublersburg school room. The whole township wil meet there as they have before. Let every democrat turn out and take an ac tive part as all good citizens should. Call lates for three A new industry was put last week. It is hunting and dessecting skunks. There has been quite a number killed and they are now busy out the oil and cunning the hides. will not give the stockholders names in this issue, but if you have no cold in the bead you can scent them after you get off the train at the Park m oper: rendering We Sing Ine BLANCHARD. of Mr. Shrader, lock Haven, trans acted business in our town on Toesday Mr. Spooner returned home to take up his work with his congregation there on Saturday. Miss onow laura Fordsman i shoe on Saturday, week's visit at home Mr I. S. Frain nesday, the 12th ness with N. H Mr. Scott Lucas, of Philadelphia, spent a few days in our town, this week, He was called home to attend the funeral of his mother, We James Eagan, Jr., and Emanuel Robb have an eye cast towards Muncy. Boys be careful it is not all milk and homey that in Muncy Creek. returned - : afte a in our town Wed rapsacting busi. was inst Johnston notice flows Mrs. Lucinda Spangler, after an ill. ness of eleven weeks, died on Sunday morning at eight o'clock. The funeral took place on Tuesday moming at 10:30, from the Baptist church On Monday evening, January ioth, Mrs. Nancy Lucas, of this place, had a paralytic stroke, and Lisgered till Friday evening, when the death messenger came and called her home. The funeral took place on Monday at two o'clock. Mrs Lucas was in her 79th year and a mem ber of the Christian church for 63 years. It was a very large funeral, The sad news came to our town on Wednesday announcing the deathof Mr Andrew Bowes, Sr., of Jersey Shore, Mr Bowes was a son of Thomas Bowes, of Liberty township The funeral took place on Friday forenoon, from the Methodist church, at Beech Creek. In terment in the Baptist cemetery, at Blanchard. It was a very large funeral The Brotherhood of Brakemen, of Jersey Shore, and the Odd Fellows, of Blanch. | ard, attended in a body. Mr. Bowes | leavesa wife and twolittie boys to mourn | his loss, WOLF'S STORE. i At this writing the roads are in a bad condition owing to the spow banks and Many changes will take place in this vicinity in the spring. We will mention | 3 | the recent rains, | more about it later, Auditor's Notice. In the Orphans’ Court of Centre County, in | the matier of the estate of John BH Ungar, Inte 0° Gregg twp, Centre Ca, Pa, decd The undersigned anditor, appointed by the anid Court to make distribution of the funds in the hands of the sdndnistrator, to and among those legally entitled thereto, will at tend to the duties of his appointment at his office in Bellefonte, Pa, Friday, January 25h, A.D, 188 at 10 o'clock, A. MM, «wt whieh time and place all parties interested may appear wnd present their claims, or forever aller be Aebarred from coming in on said fand 17m J THOMAS MITCHELL Auditor Auditor's Notice. the matter of the o ate of William Beehdel, Inte of Snow Shoe twp, Centre Co, Pe, dec'd, The undersigned auditor, nppointed oy the sald Court to reports a schedule of distribu tion of the funda, ste, in the he nds of the sd. ministrator of the said det'd, to and among those legally entitled thereto, will attend to of his . ntment at his o in parties inter L thelr claime # MITCHELL, Auditor | Sunday he stopped with Benjamin Beck, { than 5 days. William Garrett, of [llinois, is at pre. | sent visiting fric.ds in this section. Over | Tue protracted meeting tn the United | Evaogoueai chiaich, after continuing over | five weeks, closed last week resulting in | ten conversions i PILES PERMANENTLY CURED i In From 3 to 5 Days’ Time | by the use of Lo Mo. One bottle guar: | | anteed io cure any case of piles, regard. | to remain under the parental roof. Her | less of how long standing, what you have | many friends are glad to welcome ber In the Orphans’ Conrt of Centre County { In | | tried, or what your physician ‘may claim, | Mon. ¥ refunded if permanent cure is not obtained in the most severe cases in less After all others fail get Lo-Mo and becured. Price 75¢. per bot. bottle. Sold by all first class druggists, or sent prepaid to any address on Receipt of price. Address Ani Logue, Wil. lamsport, Pa. 10-98 The CENTRE DEMOCRAT and Pittsburg CENTRE CO | | town transacting business on Thursday. W. Post for $1.50 a year, HOWARD EVENTS. Renting and moving is the talk of the town. Mr, Harry Allison moved back to La- mar, on Friday. Mr, Stewart, of Tyrone, was a guest {of Wm. Thomas, on Wednesday. We are sorry to say that Dr, I. Hensyl is not improving very fast. Mr. Heaton, of Bellefonte, was in our R. Squire Noll, of Lock Haven, was visit. | ing friends at this place, over Sunday Parties from Aaronsburg, purchased a | first class engine from J. B. Wetzel Monday. , on Mr. B. Polsen, formerly of this place, was shaking hands with his many friends over Sunday, Two shirts and underwaists were t; from the line, at J. W. Mayes, on Monday evening Mr. Ira Packer left for Friday, where he expects to have a med ical examination, Mrs. Katie Brown, of Mt. Eagle, and her sister Lizzie, made a short call at E E. Dietz's on Monday Miss Mitty Lucas left for Milton, on Saturday, where she will spend a or ten days among friends WANTED -~Fat hogs by Jas. Diehl, our buckster, | hogs one day the past week Mr Pittsburg, on i week Ocker and family wring : gan bleeding and D1 had to be called before relief Mr. Bierly, who had gone mountain to the funeral of his law a where his took sick, was Wednesday John A. Thompson and Mr. D have purchased the butcher shop, form erly owned by D. T. Allison 5 } "ny teh rd the butcheri few weeks ago unable 0 return unti Holter and to go i tn this place in the near future. © xX DE x3 into ISINCSs Quite a number of our tended the party over at on Monday evenin They ing a good time, and came very early hour, on Tuesday gay folks at Henderson's, hav at a morning report home the near future, when new hers Mr, John A. Thompson and D {olter open up their shop, formerly owned by D. T. Allon, choice nay be expected, as no other will handled. Then our friend, Mr. Harsh barger, of Milesburg, t his meat wagon comas town, our meats bas Can is when he 3 al dome, HOWARD KO. 2 Miss Mattie Locas says Willie was ug ou Sunday, with Colie in the buggy Miss Altie Heverly was elected tary of the Disciple Sunday school, on Sanday Monday Mr. John Frick engine went away cellent job The notices are CTE On Wetzel's new It was an ex- up announcing the primary election the democrats of Howard township. The place of meet. ing 18 the Sand Hill School house. Geo of i D. Johnston (Chairman.) Ou last Thursday night the members of the new Disciple church elected officers for the ensuing year, which end ed as follows: —President,—E. E. Man. ley, Secretary]. W. Beck; Elders—E E. Manley, H. T. Lucas, J. Z. Long and Wm. T. Lucas; Deacons-N. Pletcher, Boyd Wilson, J. W. Beck and Grant Swyers, new in last week's columns the Howard correspondent raised a joke about | W Beck sticking in frout Weishe's shop, with a load containing 700 pounds In correction, Mr. Beck had a load of 3150 pounds and as the roads were slip. pery and his horses smooth he stopped in front of the shop to remove the shoes from his horses so they would not slip of D | Since the joke has happened he says he was bakiog and put too much £pook yeast in his bread. WOODWARD, Sleighing or skatingis the sentiment of all, The quarterly meeting, conducted by Rev, Erdman, proved a success. Mr. Reinhart and Mis. Catharine Orn. dorf are on the sick list. Mrs. Fultz, who was visiting friends at a distance, is again at the old home- stead, The surprise party at Moyer's was at- tended by many. All enjoyed’ them. selves to the utmost, Mr. Williams and wife, of near Belles fonte, visited his friend, Samuel Wil liams, at this place. The revival meetings in the Evangel. eal church, are still mm progress, with several penctants, and large attendances, Miss Laura Ard, who had been in Piniadelphia for some time, has returned home, Two Buans:~Two bears were shot last Thursday, ove in Pive Creek hollow by Clayton Yonada, the other iu the nar. rows by Frank Bressler. Bressler being alone, he should have full value of the bear killed by him, The weight of ihe last mentioned was 340 pounds, “Tre Crnrre DEMOCRAT and week. ly Pittsburg Fost, ove year for $1.50. | dripping i seribed a rapid sem. circle under water, | moonlight, and th's | usually lasts abou A BRIDGE OF FISH. EXTRAORDINARY INCIDENT OF THE ALASKAN SALMON SEASON, Foroed From the Malan Stream Into a Shal- tow Tributary, They Formed an Immov~ able Jam—One Man Crossed it With » Horse and Buggy. Advices from the Fraser and Colum- dicate that this will be the biggest sal- | | good record mon year within a quarter century. The fish are running upstream liter- ally in swarms; so close do they run, in fact, that a canoe paddled over the surface becomes an instrument of death, killing hunireds of salmon In fts passage. In the upper tributaries of the Fraser the crush is tremendous, and the certain result will be the prac- tical damming up of these narrow mountain torrents with solid masses of dead fish, says the Washington Star, Dr. Tarleton H. Bean, director of the New York aquarium, who has won both fame and wide experience as a member of the United States fish com- mission, is authority for the following statement: “It may confidently be asserted that itish Columbia and Alsska will this beat the rec rd with their fish It is hat so tremendous h that hundreds are of the water and sald of fi reed out men range tches of y cast thei hh, platformed ime cure ver being its fierce and sunken rocks, they cast fror A good man can catch hun- indred fish at six cents a fish means 412 a day; and that is no unusual wage in the season. BHe- low the delta 1 have heard of $100 be- two men in a single day in a single night hws not been in the have any notion of the of sa.mon during a very the present A single on from tr y personal knowl- i On of the Fraser river » made of salmon, yd had begun to nain stream he bax dreds daily Two h fing earned by -Or, 10 be exact, “Nobody who Northwest can one occasion 1 the water grew sh and the banks an abs human Brooklyn d move forward or back imprisoned it water, tne the scorchint sun. was quite eo sy for my Indian take th horse and buggy ext=wordinary natural wod on fool. Judg- vETrY ns jam bridge years ago under "R driver ACTORS bridge, while | inet by the height of the river and the extent of the fish dam, | should say that t ere was an actual waste of fully 2.500 or 3,000 fish in that jam. Subsequently I was informed thet such jams are by no means un- CO "mon to this foll banks the cheaper the canning Now. however nese, who are at o and more easily managed the work “The night fishi g very pict esque. You see the dark figures of fishermen standirt in bold re against the mooni hi hen high air whirls the big 1 of, sweeping at ad of its ire Deftly the \ ce cleaner L : iat GO Mos is en wm-bou d lently current of the Fras vr. There is a min ute or two of wait ng, and then, with a swish and a great scattering of gpray, up comes the net, dank and from the river, having de- poie it cuts into swift almost en the time keen eyes can see within its meshes the silver scales of the salt on, wriggling and strugging for free: om that is his no mre. Then comes the quick blow of the killing club, a~d the dead fish is tossed into the cre ls.” The work of carning, according te Mr. H. Tarleton Bean and Mr. Fraser, two months, A Chinese can clean about 1,000 fish in a jay. Sometimes tl & canners turn out 15,000 cans in twenty-four hours. Once more it 8 vhirled across Watermelon Cutting in Georgia. “It is worth a tr'p to Georgian,” said Senator Clay, "to see a watermelon sutting. The farmers and thelr fami fos gather from miles around, and shousands of melons—a line sometimes stretching for a quarter of a mile—are sacrificed upon the altar of a unique soliday, There are more melons out snd eaten on a si gle day than yon would see In Wish ngton in a month, Inly we do not eat the melon down to Jie rind. We take out the juley, seeds ess hecrt, and then, In our extravas gance, we throw the rest away.’ Washington Post, Franch Kose Cult, A form of clothing known as knee julls 18 sald 10 be ued quite generally m France by all classes during the winter. It Is a woolen cuff for the tnoes, much the same ax (5 England Is worn around the wrists GREENBURR ITEMS, On Sunday evening some of our young folks bad a good laugh again. On Sunday some of our young people were to the dedication of the Evangelical church, at Tylersville, A musical convention will be held in the Reformed church, at this place, be. ginning Jau. 24, 1848, continuing through the week, ending with a grand concert. Course ticket 50; concert ticket 10 and 15 | cents, bia rivers, as well as from Alaska, in- | cents The public schoo! at this place, has a | It bas the best any school in the wwwoship ber of scholars that winter were 61, a one teacher, of pum this for record The have attended very large school Honesty ana Virtue. Everybody Says So. ts Cas { highest for ; MOS. Gisiress Absolutely Pure Garman’s Opera House The following attra | booked by Manager Garman for season ine you should | Graggists, i You may have price fifty cents and a sample free ' FEMA address to Dr ] ’ " Kil he } 5 of this paper nuinencss of this offer bottle and pamphlet both sent | } CENTRE | “=| Show | BELLEFONTE = What Ope Customer Said WE ARE SHOWING THE RRECT STYLES HUNTING ATTHE RIGHT PRICES IT BY A VISIT. YOU Al » . } WILL PRO] TRY AUPLLE’S, ALLEGHENY STREET, BELLEFONTE | i T
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers