THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. JUNE 13, 1907 more than forty b : nber of the Method ’ al took place fre A new floor is being laid in the P, R. R. freight Mrs, John 1, Olewine retut Tuesday Pr. A.W. spent several d ays tawney Hafer, of Bellefonte, | this week at Punxsu- RECENT DEATHS station, HAuRIS SrAnNGLES 1 1ohter : a wnchara, y trom Hanover. Oscar Wetzel. of who has been J. McClincy, parents in Bellefonte BELLEFONTE AND VICINITY PARAGRAPHS Edward Spangler visiting his the past month, for | had been seriously ill much Pitcairn, : , i y An fn ) ) Ing | {othe afternoon at 2 Mr Bellefonte, evening of tuberculosis better * nie * arent The morning p Was Mary Cars THE IN SHORT y LOCAL HAPPENINGS No more steam heat bills tember, “Farmer Jone mn in town and Mrs recent lle, one of Centre ty's, talent 8 teachers, transacted Belle fonte, Monday —Wm. H. Lee, of our sanctum a call same time Joseph Rauch from Madisonburg, illun tum, — Mrs. Herbert been visiting mn ents, Mr. and Mrs, John left Thursday for her home i City. Rev. Dr. and Mrs hall, gave our sanctun on Monday, hs the funer Hool JOIlY Aas Bellringer, 1 . Belléfonte Boal, and well as ! from the Rev the Spanish v only mon States —Mrs who has + of months spend some thei Le vi cer Cook, in the hope of t erate her shattered health hippo will spend the ensuing few months with Mulbergers, on the farm in Benner town- ship. eing ~This is the evening for the enter-! tainment ] in Garmans onera house by Wm us Mond of tru LO see KR Man nunity ; ana tion in advance bears are geting munity that the cu past fields and mil ) simply had to believe him, a occasioned a ippre sod smile A num ber of young cubs were caught recently, but later were released, He also reports much cold weather, which if it continues they will be goitipeiie’ to pull the plug out of the natural gas well and burn it up to ripen the cherry crop by the 4th of July. And be also Is an honorable man, too, ure «Thursday Mrs. Louisa Brackbill, the | venerable mother of W, R, Brackbill, one of Bellefonte's successful merchants, | | celebrated her 88 birthday, and for one 80 advanced in years she is truly a most remarkable lady. She is well preserved | hysically, and is able to still take an plerest in most everything about her. Thursday quite a number of her friends | called at the Brackbill residence on Spring street where she gave them a cordial greeting and was almost as spry as when she was in her teens. She isa very pleasant lady and always has a fod w for everybody, thus her riends are legion, Her name was Miss Louisa Runkle and is of one/of the pioneer familes of Centre county. It is to be oy that she may be spared to round out a century. Coos ine MIR. has year { port, | | week, one all from Union City, arrived in Bel Friday j Commencement exercises at f tege hie wes w | see our friend return been Miss Sarah P. Bayard visited her home in remained maornt 1071 D. Se ar ack, | M no ny. Hortert 1 Mr: Mrs laker an 1 friends of Mr. and They attended the State Cols evemng Ex-Jury e Sev Hefonte f Va. where he exp lumber business \ Bellefonte Mr, Irv friends and It was a sou ret to them to bave hi South is the place to make money now, and we shouldn't be surprised A mulnotaire leave to ~Among the visitors in Bellefonte, Mondayjwas Shem Spigelmyer, of Antes Fort, and Jesse Gheen, of Kansas city Mo. The latter is a son of W.E. Gheen, one of Jersey Shore's most prosperous citizens, He came east on a little trip | and was in Bellefonte looking over the regular Klondyke recently purchased here by G. M. Shem BSpigelmyer. We now have res ference to the purchasing of the flouting ] mill and the business block on west Hig street which is under the management of Mr, Gamble, Mr. Gheen is in the to bacco business out west and travels all over the south west just rollin object, Shem Spigelmyer f A) . evening at 7:30 yamble, his father and | | in the mornin Money! why he is | trost he would hustle out and cover his in it, and thus to him its no | plants, looks more | the appointed hour, Are Xk re te ¥. M ( \. KY? } A great many of v er ¥ Ant JAK 4 MNO a Hy the young folks have not been sees, and it | wee ¢i 3 hi, , . fried tL ABAZETS - ’ AN Mr that A man that will reflect the rm on the side of a wagon ythat it can be painted without having ave his for Bellefonte ought to have enough of genius in it to get up a con trivance of that kind, He would like to have spent a week here along our trout streams but business wouldn't permit it So he returned after a short but pleas ant visit “Bob” Woodring, the North Ward mail earrier, has great trouble with that arden of his d he dreams of frosts and imagines that everything is going to the dick Mr Says parents Harry who sex patent for a machine : ’ name of af ‘ : o mark oUt the letters will h tune made The other evening, before going to bed, | he took the brush off a long handle and | tied a thermometer to the end of the stick | | and pus it out of the bedroom window, | wen set the alarm clock for 1 o'clock thinking that if there was He t Bang went the timepiece at He arose quickly like a millionaire and bond holder every | and in drawing in the theromometer he time hecomes to town. We however, are sorry to state that W, E, Gheen is in delicate health at his home at Jersey Shore. i oa -e found that it was four warmer than when he went to , He was going to swear, when he remembered he was a Lutheran, — Every night he goes to! t the or CVEeETR: South she Vis exposition y She will then go further ow WT Yih, Ww tok OO i het She has a » DET seieClions are Miss Heinle was assisted in this enter by Mrs. Derr Bubb, of W iamsport, a cultured soprano. Miss Ma oth al : tainment rie Walsh. an ac ymplished pianist, pre sided at the instrument Monday afternoon mine host of the Brockerhof house, H. 8S. Ray. "hitched" up his new auto, and with four of his friends took a tr p to ‘view the landscape o'er’, Starting at 3 p. m. and returning at 5.15 in the evening, The following was the route: From Bellefonte to Cen- | trehall and Potters Mills; from Potters | | Mills via Old Fort to Spring Mills and Millbeim, thence to Coburn and back to | Millbeim; thence to Madisonburg and back to Millbeim and via Old Fort to Belletonte y clock + Ilda M. R years he had L A stroke of para eC evening ol May strated him that rh bey very best care he stead } iy grew weaker and finally at the hour indicated breathed his The deceased was born in Haines township, this county, on February 2+ 1831, and was aged 76 years, 1 months and 11 days. His parents, Michael and Mary Hess, who long since passed to their reward, were among the early and most honored citizens of the county. His rrandfather, who bore the same name of Bis father, Michael Hess, was a native of given him 3 ast | Germany, and during the Revolutionary war came to this country with Count Raushmbau in 1786, and aided the Col onies in their struggle for independence The distance traveled was | He spent his boyhood on the farm and no less than 65 miles, and including | at the age of 16 years started to make ens, | stops at hotels for “watering the boss,” | his own living {burg June 1873 where he was engaged the time made was not slow, Tnx Pennypacker. Snyder statement of last September is shown by recent revelations to have been mendacious, It is especially false where it declares that “no bil) was finally settled until the article had been measured or weigh. od as the schednle” There was no measuring and no weighing for the State, and bills ted were pid without question. State officials he a the chief looters and the guilty most be prosecuted if this be ) le located in Philips. in the tanning, lumber and brick busi gaged in the groce has since successfully conducted. He was married in yA r cougty, in the spring of 1854, to Miss Sarah Eisenhaur, who survives, together with the three children born to them, viz : Charles C,, residing near Philipsburg ; Mrs. Ida M. Rothrock, Philipsburg, and Frank W., of Sandy Re One , Jonathan, residing in Williamsport, and one sister, Mrs. Lydia Stover, of Altoona, survive, PENNY 4A WORD AD} MARKET QUOTATIONS. Bellefonte. Produce The following prices prevalled Thursday morning The following prices are pald ty SpcuLER & Oo. for produce | Ege, per doves rd, Per pound allow, par pound | Sitter, bar Jound. | Bide, per por Shouiter. per’ pound Bellefonte-Grain, The following prices are paid by CO. ¥. Was } : | XEN, for n ness. About twenty years ago he on | Wheat, business, which he | Wheat, new... TW ec muncnnin s 6 00 + oo dimmmins sussssmniunsssnsses 0 LOCK MAVEN MARKETS, Prices on the curb market Wednesday Haven were as follows: s per pound H per dosen dressed Rhickeon, perd 16¢ ; lard, bushel boc, CL ———
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