THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. SEPTEMBER 19, 1907 FRANCIS SPEER'S Breezy “That” Column TAT Sam Bryan, the cornet player, is | fond of blowing himself, THAT what Bellefonte needs are fewer girls on the street after midnight TAT Robert Cole, Jr.. says clouds come high but ‘we must them, Trat Bellefonte has in it some pre fly girls, and they are not all in kitchens, either, Ii 4 that have » 14 1 Taar the girl in Bellefonte who smokes | cigaretts is a girl who would be easily | persuaded to forfeit her honor and chas- tity. _TuAT there is a girl in Bellefonte who | sings with a great deal of feeling—that | is, she sings as though she was feeling | badly. THAT Lewin Tobias ‘Captain of the | huckelberry band” goes to Spigimeyets Honk, | cam Honk. in his new automobile, Trar Linn McGinley, of Bellefonte, says that the best thing out is a sore | tooth ; he had the experience and he | ought to know. THAT it is to be hoped that Carrie Na- tion will never hear of that Lock Haven girl who grew an acre of tobacco in the First ward of that city. THAT a certain young man and young lady in Bellefonte had better abandon those Sunday afternoon walks to mountains. ‘Ni uff sed.” THAT once in a while you > £ . a girl in Belle who doesn't whether the people know he is seldom over sixte come across r age. pou THAT pushes his nose in ness has a kind may make his ey Tuar they say into taken a de ep intere ment firemen arrived at ; put out about it, of Bellefor Tuar the fact that the stork visited on one trip ought be an inducement for some married take a water vo ’ . good friends i attend shoud take a h The fellow gentlemen with a ill be out instead of in, rates hay who h a great deal of regret put Charles Brackbill on he g so often but his friends would like to know what became of that yellow kitten he didn't get down at Hecla Park the other t have looped the . mu day ; she mus loop Tuar Love Lane, of Bellefonte, has a great stand-in with the girls since he made himself famous on the tennis court. It beats the bugs what admiration a woman has for a conqueror. They will be carrying him around on a chip, after a while THAT a man may get into society and at the save ti be a laughing stoek There } cases in Bellefonte where people were invited out into soci ety for reasons best known to the host, and the guests felt as much out of | place as a bedbug in bed with an Egyp- tian mummy re been Bellefonte the averge man's idea of religious liberty is the privilege of remaining away from Wednesday evening prayer meeting. If the attend ance of men at the mid-week prayer is co.relative the number who will reach Heaven, you can almost count them on your fingers meeting to Tuar the people of Bellefonte should not be surprised if they hear of a tragedy It is said there is a colored individual! who is paying attention to a white girl here. He had better take a pointer from this little “That” by staying away from her. They are laying for him and the first thing he knows fe will get it where the rooster got the axe, Tuar the young lady and gentleman, of Bellefonte, who were up in the Hecla Gap the other afternoon, were having a mighty good time until their fun was spoiled by the appearance of an unwel come visitor, vothing more could be expected of the young man, but the Joung lady in question should take off er robe of righteousness if she desires to cut up unquestionable capers such as she was indulging in on this occasion, The great trouble with Bellefonte is it has too many double.faced girls, NINN EN WORHOFTER FISHER Der olt Hons Shimmel {ss en mon Dare ol de Shrift ows-wennich kon ; Ehr kon de Psolma off-handt shtaita d lung. und loud und heftich baida sit ma airlich, Soondawy "sieht rut baleegt ¢hr em go t kt Now wi leit hen immer nix egsh ped 'w'm Hons das wore-heit g'shtreckt 18 reason des en mon lich wore-helt immer kon cker fever in der fees bi'm Hons en olt disense mn sopling und en shirick felt nivver un de grick ‘nd oof ma olda fowla bluck Dart fisht und fisht ehr, huekt und huekt Und even wun ehr nix rous tseegt Don coomt ehr hame und leegt int Fua'm k tsu foos olle dreck Wart g'tisht Ieh wase ehr hut en heck Amohl galand, und olles woh! Report es wore en blindy ohl Und se tseit hut ehr sich fershwora Ehr het en feer-foos hecht falora Der Hons dut olles gude und singt Bis aerdt und himmel tsommer sopringt Ehr's gude {im g'sung-bueh, gude um dish Und nemt gude mose fun sina fish ; Olso, far olles bossa greeya, Iss ehr nodeerlich gude um leeya Es hut amohl en fish ga-tsupt Und, Oh! wos hut si hartz gag! Und im egeitement follt ehrn (Ehr's sheer farsuffa, miner dred Duch hut ehr uns dechame gawl Es het en fish ene nl garissa ip er wun WOK aller I would have : As i time to get him ' +» H oO ito : i In sure ok me a devil of {Fen eat? didn’t try to eat him hook Fe 5 Reunion of 49th Regiment, OD vt 3 PY a I. D Sheevny Chester Ane hree present § Jlanchard ¥ N 1s have all reunion Profitable Fishing Robert H. F rst, of sent to a friend in that when dressed one-half pounds. This is, however, only a fair sample of a recent night's catch ir Fishing creek, as in all he succeeded in getting 75 fine, fresh water eels, the largest of which weighed five and one hall pounds and measured 37% inches long. Reckoning that the retail price of this species, when sold is 20 cents Pe lb this monster would be worth Cedar Springs Lock Haven an eel weighed three and on 1.00, Mr. Furst and his friends, how. ever, donot catch fish to sell, but it will be seen what this single night's effort would be worth to a fisherman State College Opened The Dentativania State College opon- ed for the fall term today, and from pre. sent indications the incoming Freshman class will number close to five hundred students, so that the attendance will be over one thousand young men and wo men. The aew course of home econ. omics is attracting considerable attention throughout the State and will no doubt draw quite a number of young women tothe College this year, Miss Louise | Waugh, late of the Michigan State Col lege, will be at the head of this depart | ment with Miss Sarah Lovejoy, former | ly dean of the National Park Seminary, a dean of the course : i : New Homes in the West Send for free copy of pamphlet con. jalning Synopes of the United States | homest laws and information how to | secure a cheap irrigated farm or a quar ter section of splendid free farming or [grazing land along the new railway lines of the Chicago & North Western Ry., in South Dakota, Wycoming and other states. All agents sell special low rate excursion tickets to homeseek- ers via The North Western Line. Full imformation on request, W, B, Kuiskern. Passenger rafic Manager, Chicago, x the Yale Forestry | lege but will { liam F | six new buildings NEW APPOINTMENTS. } : | c——— { There is now no doubt that the agri- | cultural work at The Pennsylvania | | State College is to be vastly broadened | of | {this year. Tue staff of the school | agriculture has been entirely re-organiz- |ed and since the beginning of the year there have been appointed five new heads of departments at the Experiment Sta tion and ten assistants. The latest ap- pointments made are as follows Hugh P. Baker, of the lowa had been elected professor o forestry. Prof the Michigan 5 State College, | Jaker is a graduate of Agricultural College and He the advantage of hav- practical experience throughout the United States through his connection with the government for estry service, and should prove an able man in the new forestry just established there. H. R. Fulton, plant pathologist of the school come Slate College with ing had a wide } vy undoubtedly school of | Louisiana Experiment Stativn, bas been elected assistant professor of botany He is agraduate of the University Mississippi and subsequently pursued post graduate work in botany at the Uni. versity of Missouri and Harvard, He will not only give instruction in the col 1ave charge of investiga- tions in plant diseases. Charles F. Shaw, field expert of the United States Bureau of Soils, has been elected an instructor in agronomy. He is a graduate of Cornell University and during the past summer has been mak in soil survey of Centre county nville, Ontario ciected instructor of n be New School Laws . exceed y th the schools and Dragged to Death, Ar ’ MOrga again and rar tlie care taker bruised ling, with his clothing almost torn off, On a hill above the road Robert W SAW acci He hurried do and tried to un he rope, whic) irawn we. und th He the u tight unat Life was not although th tll was fra bruised partially re- ut died later he child's ne was ye 20 and had to « t extinct d and the body sed by the cow's hoofs covered conscioust A Horrible Crime A terrible crime was committed at the Cambria county almshouse Saturday night, and which was not discovered un til Sunday morning. The victims are Catharine, aged 3 years, and Martha aged 1 year, children of Mr, and Mrs John Thomas, of Spangler. The mother under arrest, The children were found dead in their bed Sunday morning with the marks of human fingers on their throats, indicating that they had been strangled. The jury which had been sworn in to investigate the case decided on a verdict that the two girls had come to their death by strangulation at the hands of their mother. It was brought out at the inquest that the wind- vipes of both children had been crushed Mrs. Thomas is 31 years old is Granger's Banks to the State Master Wil Hill, of Chambersburg, the bank movement ames (irange members is advancing rapidly. Fourteen institu Accordin [tions have been organized in eighteen months and work is now proceeding on The aggregate capi tal of Grange banks now in operation is : | about $1,000,000, The Corn Crop. It all depends on the early or late coming of Jack Frost whether or not Penns Vt, will have a marketable corn crop. The past fifteen days have worked wonders with the corn, and bar. ring frost the crop will far exceed the expectations of most, The fireman doesn’t mind being invite ed to go to blazes, | foot | Later the mangled body of an ‘unknown [BLUE LAWS IN PENNSYLVANIA | | A Very Strict Enforcement to Be Made in South Fork on Sunday The town of South Fork, near Johns- | town, will witness on Sunday the most rapid enforcement of blue laws that has been recorded in some time. Residents opposed to a liberal observance of the | Sabbath entered complaint with the bur- gess, ar further than rapid of Puritans had 1d he went even the (red of the thing t at South Fork to sell t ts to ned, some rs: The i A Ke The electric , and there will bs evening closed all sy LO alone The 1at if the blue are to be enforced at all they apply 11 «1:1 fil Alle, takes the positi . | Harvest Home Services. | Harvest home services were held Sur- day morning in St. Johns Reformed church and in the Zion Reformed church at 2. 30 p.m. The decorations in St, | John's church were unusually fine, the! the entire front of the church was a mass of flowers, fruits and vegetables, Corn wheat and oats in the shock were used in decorating. Rev. Schmidt preached an ex forceful sermon on the rit of a Harvest Ho H Sheatz Will Not Debate Af. { ‘ey ’ Conscience Gave Him no Peace Married on Gettysburg Battlefield Standing on h hei of "Little : over that portion battlefield, on which Captain Hiram Johnsons, for mn Mich. now an employe of Weather Bureau, Wash ington, D, C.. was married to Miss Mary G. Todunter, also of Washington, and a General Pickett, whose famous charge at Gettysburg marked the cul minating point in the battle. The cere- mony was performed by the Rev, W W. Hartman. of the Methodist church The bride and bridegroom were there attending the Union | menry « yenice the nice of Veterans’ Legion eeting, and while there concluded to be married on the historic spot. This is the second marriage on Little Round Top within ten days 33 Years In One Cell A protest against keeping Jessie Pomeroy. the murderer, in solitary cot. finement at the Charlestown Mass. state prison was filed with Governor Guild by Fred H. Gille, secretary of the American Society for the Promotion of Criminal Anthropology. The petition | recites that Pomeroy has served a sen. tence, in solitary confinement for 33 years, He has been in jail since he was 14 years old and has never been allowed out of his cell to stroll with other prison. ers, work with them at the benches, nor even to attend divine services, He has never seen an plectric car, talked through a telephone or ridden in an elevator, She Steps on a Dead Arm Stepping from the Pennsylvania tele graph tower at Kittanning Point Sunday {iss Irene Rooney, the operator, set upon the severed arm of a man, man was taken off the brake rigging of A freight car near Gallitzin, John Leathers who has been employed at the Curtin Forge had the misfortune of running a of scrap iron in his foot the UR Tay. P x | papers wrote articles about Make Careful Note ” Make way for the rural mail carrier, I'he postmaster general has issued a ruling to the effect that the rural mai carrier has the right of way on all roads, and that carriages and conveyances of all description must make way for him on the public highway ter general has also ral ter intend 1 ber of the | other words the address OX il must « Ch, led for rural an address other than on the Yes, we sold 100,000 Bears! one, a the panel then duced our Bruin family into society by placing them in a conspicuous place in one There the shown in mntro- of our public parks people noticed them immediately; their appearance made them news. them, and everybody else famous; eysrylody asked “Di you see those bears in the park- wi NEW ENGRAVING MACHINERY, 6 | Be 0 BEAR BEAR Installed by the The Be - ’ Engraving Com- ENGRAVING PLANT IN CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA PATRONS ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO AN (LCR Renglel, =e \- THE, BEY ENGRAVING (0. WILLIAMSPORT PA. Wal Paper, Window Shades, Curtain poles, paints, oils, glass, etc., AT ECKENROTH BROTHERS, BUSH ARCADE, BR SOOO tr OOD BB O--B-BB-BB BELLEFONTE, PA. SPECIAL SALE, FRIDAY SEPT. 20th Children’s £1.75 Shoes at £2.00 Shoes at, . Children’s from school Shoes school Suits coves $1.25 up Workmen's Bargain Store, CCETIT ALLCENY & BISHOP STS, Bellefonte, Pa,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers