Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, February 14, 1901, Image 5

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THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA., FEBRUARY 14, 1901.
HAPPENINGS
ABOUT TOWN
The Local News Compiled During
the Week
BRIEFLY TOLD IN AFEW LINES
Movements of Our People—Personal
Mention, Society Events—What
Has Transpired Worthy of Men-
tion—ShortParagraphs.
— Uncle Tom's Cabin will be presented
at the opera house this evening, by a
good company.
—Miss Kate Shugert departed Friday
afternoon for Bryn Mawr, Pa. to enter
the college at that place.
~- Wilbur
visiting his pareuts, Mr. and Mrs. J. F
Eckman, on East Lamb street
Eckman, of Baltimore, is
Bellefonte lawyers are getting un
easy Mrs. Nation
smash the bar with her little hatchet,
Misses Sarah Mary
Martin left Saturday morning for Phila.
delphia where they will visit friends for
Jest comes here to
Valence and
a week,
—J. Calvin Meyer, Esq., left Saturday
morning tor Philadelphia and other points
had
where he important business to |
transact.
— Revival meetings are in pr
all the charges in the county. Sur
|
|
|
some good should result from these la
bors of the pastors |
Mendis
morning from an extended
Italy. While
his old home, the city
— Peter returned on Sunday
through
trip
» «dl |
in that country he vi
of Rome,
James T. Pletcher, of Howard, nig
operator at Tyrone station, bas been ap-
pointed
sumed bis new duties Monday.
—Mrs. John LL. Kurtz,
the st sustained
some {i ago
her complete recovery is only a
agent at Curtin station, and as- |
who fell
is
me slowly
of time, |
The County Commissioners are bi
this week
and other |
The avnual spring election takes place
next Tuesday.
delivering election supplies
lavks throughout the county,
—Sledding parties from Pme Grove
State College, Scotia and other points |
| no
came to town Tuesday evening to wit
Quo Vadis" in
the opera house.
This has been one of the quietest
campaigns known in the boro at a spring
You bardly bear the
election subject
of election mentioned and the likelihood
out
Mammoth
he
is that a small vote will be
~All. W. Martir
Tom production wil
house this evening
's Uncle
at the
Every bx dy seems to
this famous j time it
This
enjoy ay every
2
comes along a good cx
and will be sure bave a good
1 Mrs L
Hol
adeiphbia «
{ QO
Miss Emma
from Ph
mained
and
and
family are
|
| $250,000 to tre
{| sO badly
opera |
~ Wilson Gephart,of Princeton College'
1s home on a short vacation,
~William Hunter, of Pittsburg, is vis:
iting his father, Steele Hunter.
Allen Yearick has the mail route
between Rebersburg and Coburn.
Ira D. Garman, of Philadelphia, was
visiting his father at this place, Sunday,
William Galbraith, the plumber, is
at State College with
ill at his home
pleurisy.
Miss Carrie Bowen, of Philadelphia,
is visiting her sister Mrs. Stites, on Al
legheny street,
Girl”
play, which will be seen here
“The American is the title of
a new
next Tuesday evening.
Andrew Carnegie has donated an
organ to the Methodist Episcopal church
congregation at Bellwood.
WwW. F
burg's young men, has returned froin
Harshberger, one of Hublers-
Kansas after a year’s stay.
Miller
totally helpless and he is lying at hi
Paralysis has rendered Chas
5
home on South Potter street.
Sidney Keefer, who has been sick at
at Tyrone on Sunday afternoon.
—The east end of Miles township has |
an aged citizen in the person of John H
Herb, who has scored his S4th year
Miss Y. Williams,
the Philipsburg Ledger, is very ill
Annie editor of
with
pueumonia at her Philij
A
burg home,
bill has been introduced in the
house of representatives appropriating |
Pennsylvania State Col
cge
Mrs,
Woodward
Miller moved from
Hall,
daughter, Mrs
eor Ee
to Linden where she
intends living with her
Fannie Keller
the
Rearick, foreman in
of the
(
spent a few days
artment large ar
The
otate College not latter than May
»
Ez. Tress Linden Hall
is advertised in the Democrat. Ezr
three debates first
ier's sale near
a in-
Then
conven
tends moving west in
sing the
a] Year.
who'll SOngs at our
tions?
People .from the township districts
Sow
ads being
longer complain of a want of
The growl now is over the
blocked by drifts as to impede
travel
Stage routes have been
y, The Lock
Mr
heim -Rebersburg route to
given
lows Haven and
routes to George Tibbens
M
| Tibbens
C Sunbury,
road
M of
of the Central R
Col
Drees
} :
Clement,
lent of
Pennsy
vauu
foute Furnace Cot
$8 Vera Snook hast
the
M
give up her position in
Philadelphia during tbe winter where his |
coal
tion
office requires his constant atten
Apples appear to be exceedingly
scarce the
one or two places had them |
then
placed them in the line of
in stores about town Only
or saie and
offered at that
The
price asked was 4o ‘cents per peck and
$1.50 per bushel The short crop
aaron is the cause and that was due to
they were prices
uxuries
last
being damaged by the storm that blew
most of them off of the trees In the fall,
at the time they were ready for picking.
Petitions are being circulated through
the county asking the legislatare to pass
an act tor out of the Centr
ff Cond
efund
to
€ county
treasury, ex-sher , the value
of the Goodman house burned by his
orders at Woodward during the Etlinger
affair
about £1800. The
there was no authority |
fire to the house.
had decided
aw lor settling
courts
n
The act was generally
approved by the citizens at the time
The members of company B of this
place are more than delighted since they |
have received news that they will be ex
pected to parti ipate in the ipavgural pa
rade at Washington, March 4th
portation will be furnished
Trans.
to troops
traveling in not less than company organ.
izations
lowed. The sth Re KE. with the 10th, 14th,
16th,
at Fifth andl, street and New York Ave
NW
No per diera pay will be al
and will ‘be quartered in Armory
Owing to the severe snow squall that
prevailed on (Saturday afternoon
evening the 'Basket Ball
and
team of Univer
sity of Pennsylvania was unable to reach
State College that evenis kK and a large
Audience disappointed
by the afternoon train and intended to
Ko Led. When
they got out the pike in the vicinity of
up to the college by
the Rishel farm they found the roads so |
adly drifted that Iwas impossible to get
through and came back to Bel efoute
During the afternoon two sled oads of
young people from town went to the col
lege 10 see the game, and they too could
not get through and had to remain at
college'until the next day. In Pennsval.
ley most of the cross roads are drifted
shut and in some places the people can
drive over the fentes. Asa rule, these
roads always have higher drifts than in
any other section of the county,
The amount, with court costs, is i
They came here |
| al
LE,
|
war people helg
gh rides was not
The Millbeim knitting
are informed, bas secured a new mana.
factory, we
ger and is about to start
What there,
Harrisburg, is economy
R up again
was needed same as at
Calvin Spicher, of Potter township,
| went to Morganza, where he obtained a
the Reform Mr
Spicher was a teacher, taught the
position in school
and
Tusseyville school this winter
The
street,
on East Cur
Prof David
Etters, was sold Mood .y to Rum
Central
VanPelt property
tin occupied by
John
berger, station agent for the
Railroad of Pennsylvania at this place
On Monday Daniel Garman passed
the Sist Owing to a slight
illness that overtook him some few days
With
this exception, his health has been good
year of age
!
| prior he was not able to be about
| the past year
| “The American Girl," which is an
Tuesday
unlike the
| comedies, possesses a we
]
| nounced for pext evening 1g,
a majority of present-day
defined plot,
| which has even a serious clement Ihe
company is one of unusual strength
~The American Girl,” which will be
| at the opera house next Tuesday. has
| elements that are reminiscent of “Little
| Lord Fauntleroy It is a play of mach
| more than ordinary merit, the story be-
ginning in an engaging way and being
| interesting to the end,
Monday evening as Miss Abbie Kipe,
| sister of Mrs. Dr. M. J
ing a lamp in the patlor of their resi
Lock, was light
dence on North Spring street, a chenille
curtain caught fire and in an instant was
Miss Kipe tried her best to
put it out and had it not
men passing by just when they did,
| ablaze
been for some
Belle
fonte might have had a very disastrous
fire
Every taxpayer
the men for the eal offices. These are
more directly important to you than those
These men col
lect more of your taxes and expend it
than any others and for that reason it is
well that you see that only upright and
competent men are selected. Go 10 the
of the state and nation
election next Tuesday.
| wi
in this town last Sabbath
| his boarding place, was taken to his home {
| and largely attended.
lex relation Attorney
should remember |
that next Tuesday is the time to select |
~The ground hog isu’t “en top,” but
all full of smiles down in his hole.
—The Presbyterian church at Miles-
burg was crowded Monday evening to
witness the installing of the new pastor,
Rev. W, F. Carson.
~The stuck
ina snow drift near Mills |
on Wednesday and remained there the
greater part of the day. |
Bellefonte Central train
Pine Grove
Harris Olewine, little son of Mr. avd |
Mrs. John I. Olewine, who just recovered |
from a dangerous siege of typhoid fever, |
15 now taken ill with pleurisy.
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
evening, of next week, the 21st, 220d and |
the
Manager Gar.
23rd, the attraction at opera house
will be “Irvin French.”
man insures it will be good.
‘Miss Bessie Musser, left Wednesday
for Warriorsmark where she
lact as bridesmaid at the wedding of
her friend, Miss He Patton, to Wil
Hutchinson, of Philadelphia.
afternoon
y
len
Evangelist Warden began his work
Bible readings
Services
M.
intersting
had each afternoon and
each evening of the week, in the VY
A. hall,
are
The meetings are
The following appeal has been taken
Commonwealth
in, for
Patton
to the supreme Court
General BE
district of
Kk
the use
township, county, al
t James
again reasuarer
Common Pieas (
Train Runs Off the Track in a Drift
ain that
Montan
The passenger t
nesday morning for don
a snow drift ma th
Centre Hall, a
train was sent
the derail
jure
Tuesday night
which rec
of trouble with a
The train west
delayed in conse
Belle
passenger train fr
ng M
onte al
go back to Sor
" Y
; 4
SL As he was puttin 118 Dorses
he happened to gan
discovered it to be « n
fire The
when he
fire caught from a defective fle
The loss of Mr
furniture
house and
with only
Adams on
is about f 0, 00
small insurance
-
A Card
Missi ¥
March and,
0 convert
The short
held,
primarily
n
intended people to
the Protestant Episcopal church as su bh,
but to win souls to a deeper appreciation |
of and a freshened allegiance to Christ's
The
therefore, of earnest men.
kingdom of righteousness on earth
attendance
bers of other churches will
of fel
Christian sympathy
be regarded
as a mark spiritual owship and
(ore |
Rector of St
Brown
John's charch
-
A Coasting Accident.
old
met
Paul, the seven year son of En
gineer Edward Brown, with a seri
ous accident while coasting on Al eghe
He ran into a
head. His
the was
The aoctors
of
Hopes are
ny street, Friday night
telephone pole striking his
skull was fractured and bone
forced in upon his brain
the skull
the
trepanned
the
removing part
bone from brain
now entertained for his ultimate recov
ery
Correspondence Delayed
Owing 10 the snow drifts near Centre
Hall no mail reached us from that valley
on Wednesday, For that reason a num.
ber of correspondents’ letters did pot get
here in time for this lssue of the per
The Quickest Way to Break up a Cold
“I have used many makes of patent
and most always with some
says Mr. Henry Hoover, of
Shamokin, Pa., "but the most satisfac
tory and most wonderful in results for
colds and coughs is Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy It will break up a cold in Jess
time than any other remedy | ever used.”
For sale by Greens’ Pharmacy,
- " -
mm
Heines
good results,’
A loud woman is always a rattletrap,
struck |
1
{those who are exent
Away
* towards his house |
o
LEGAL INTELLIGENCE.
Gathered from the Various Offices About
the Court House,
MARRIAGH LICENSES.
Fravk Lingle . . . .
Lucinda Lingle . . . . .
W.lL.Royer . - . . . Bellefonte
Bertha M. Feidler Madisonburg
Edwin E Zettle Penn Hall
Margaret A. Kline "
Jos. A Sharer
Carrie Jones -
Miller Herman - .
Bella Fleck
Colver
“
§ Robert I. Smith
\ Florence C, Meyer
Sandy Ridge
‘
Bellefonte
Julian
Cen're Hall
i
REAL ESTATH TRANSVERS, |
ux, to Hanmah |
1600 ; 20 acres in Lib
J. Irwin Waguer, et
Wagner, Feb ’,
erty. frooo
John Mann's heirs, to Jacob Mann, et
al, Dec. 30, 1899; 70 acres in Curtin S88
Jno Q. Miles, treas. to Jno. G Love,
Nov. 21, 1894; 60 acres in Union $15 72. |
Frank Thompson, guardian, to Eliza
beth BE. Clark, Dec. 1884; tract of land
in Marion. $160 71
Samuel Highlands
E. Clark, April
Marion, $64 11
Jno Q Miles,
of Centre Co ,
153 perches in
|
to Elizabeth
88g: «
, et al,
ib, 1 aAcCres in
to Commi
433
sioner:
A1ces,
County Commissioners
McCaus and, et July
acres, 153 perche
al,
Elizabeth S. Tom
Si Dec. 25, 1900
loan,
to Henry Sout}
es, go pe nh in
,
ard,
ft here Wed. |
A
pltare per } Inger
mong
|
| twenty-one years the sick, those who have
rform bard manual labor, 3
| who through weakne
| are pern
| a day and that vot anti! about 1 oon
extended
Fri
wesday and Saturday of Holy
The exemption working
Ash
werk
people does ude
Weds
oF 10 ays
noession benefit
the
BR people themselves
] A pire
the
* charge must be in
he hat chair of
| thar
| with the entrance fee
sted for
ii be a 15 bird
man the
Mond Feb
(Otherwise
Com
Sth
entries
Hee De
iy
willonot he the shoot
It wi match at a 16 yard
c, § traps and so vard boundary
The shoot will be shot on the new Fair
Gsrounds and il begin at 2 0 cxck
{sharp
[raps and Bloe-rock will
if the
concluded early enough there wi
Blue rock shoot
The
on the
grounds so that id un
Ive atch
be
committee will have
for
regulation
shells Sparrow shooting nm the
They can be had
Gro
al cost
R. Mux
Chatiman
grounds
-
laformation Wanted.
Mrs Catherine Wi son, of Wheeling
West Virgmwia, who was a resident of
Pa. Furnace some thirty years a
of Robert
Ye Years Ago
KO, and
a widow Wilson who died
twe Is anxious to lesrn of
Mari.
left the county
the whereabouts of her
When Mrs
her daughter was about twelve ve ars of
age. This is Mrs
to the county
Caughter
eta Wilson
Wilson's first return
since she left, and upon
inquiry at Pa. Furnace she was disap
pointed in not being able to learn where
here daughter was now living She has
been that her had
mart man by the er,
but bas no further it
het
informed daughter
DAM Mi
formation to locate
Any person who can furnish any
information where the daughter is now
do a kindness to her mother
at this office
ied a of
living will
Dy ICaving same
La Grippe Quickly Cured,
“In the winter of 188 and
faker with a severe
is called La Gripe"
159 | was
attack of what
sass F. L Hewett,
druggist of Winfielf, I
medicine I used was two bot
It |
roke up the cold and stopped the cough
ng like magic, I have never since
been troubled with Grippe.' Chamber
lain’s Cough Remedy can always be de
pended upon to break up a severe cold
and ward off any threatened attack of
puvcumonia It is pleasant to take, ton, |
which makes ft the most desirable and |
one of the most popular preparations in
use for these ailments, For sale by
Greens’ Pharmacy.
dow
A prominent
‘The only
ties of Chamberlain's ( ough Remedy
}
and
on Cc
| store,
| He
ae —
ROYAL
DAKING
POWDER
ABSOLUTELY PURE
Makes the food more d
ROYAL BAKING POWDER 00
elicious and wholesome
NEw Yon
aaa a EE ————
SN
Musicale
the
the
under
of
Feb
Proceeds are to be
A
auspic ¢s
be given
Mission
church,
musicale will
of
Bellefonte 15
the Band
vangelical
1901, in the church
applied to the Missionary cause. Tickets
20 cents The following well known
musicians will assist in the program : |
father, W. W, |
Miss Mabel |,
and
Hall
Fauble, D. Eugene Wentzel,
Bradley, of Be
at Irvin’
Kurtz
Rhoads
Centre
Miss Ida C
Rhoads, of
Miss Mary
llefonte, Tick will
§ grocery, Green's
book store and by meme
rs of the Band.
The gi i igh ic eldom mar
Ties an acronaet,
The
time n
busy who never has any
ight ea
Sanke
Mills
Friday, March 1: ]. A.
Tues., March 5: |
f Hut
Gramley,
YES
as.
1 ’ re TINK
mare
Cows
Hogs
ons
a)
Short ! Hu
IMPLEMENTS
ng Wagon.
Oper Pew
Harr
Fork, rope
CANT
and Seed |}
r Nloves
bedsteads
Tuesday, M
SE ia {
1] pn
Sy
De
ar. 12: G.B Luca
i Fa. on the
the I
f Wor
My 1
sharp
Two
A]
Seven head
year 4 Colt govod
ws head of § !
Rhoats PBroesd sow
IMPLEMENTS 11
eye Pinder. Bb Sie
Mower, May Tedd
Hay Pork y
¥ Ladders, Polat
or, Plows, Harr
Two horse Wagons
Wagon ¥. Sleigh, Centre Hall Corn Plan
{to » rakes, forks, harness chick
and other foseph | Nef! auet
Friday, M 15: Jerry Kelly,
tne n "ha ' more
An . the fol)
LIV CUR "
STINK
LIVY
Hay Hake
arch
fy n Benner
twp.»
"n nw ir
IR how
®
o8 one mare with
Yearling oo
nileh cows 12 ye ng oat
Will be fresh «bout
Sear) ng
of shoats
sheen
ET harrows
ns new Deering Binder
Machine, 1 Deerin Mower, Km
gram aril, Bay Ladders corn
planter * horse Empire REparator snd power
saws, land roller, fanning mel, land roller.
cutting box horse power nek and belt, Boss
washing machine, cupboard. cook stove, har.
Bess of all kinds, new sleigh bay fo rope
And tack ie, and many other artiores. Wiliam
Goheen, auctioneer,
a
IMPLE
tivnt os wag
pion Mowing
pire tes tilines
I's :
i eul
I Cham
| Thur
21, |
be
|
s, Mar. 28: M. M.Lucas
b
drug |
riday, March
x
Monday, Mar. 18: Ezra
'
are din ff
£0 MOHAWK REMEDY (0 Rome, N.Y
MARKET QUOTATIO NS.
Bellefonte—Grain
ow
Co.
{ Thet
MiLLive
| Red wheat per }
| Redd Whaat per
Bye, por}
Cow ed p
Barley per bus?
| Oats Per bushe
Coburn-—Grain,
¢ bushel
’
she
Pollowing are the prices paid for grat
dealers a Coburn ' rain by the
Wheat (old) per bushel...
Wheat, new — ———
UE TT ——