Page 4 THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLFFONTE, PA. APRIL 8, 1900 The Centre Democrat, | FRED KURTZ, Editor CHAS. R, KURTZ Editor and Proprietor SR.. W. FRANCIS SPEER {asociate Editor SWORN CIRCULATION OVER 5200 TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION SUBSCRIPTION, - $1.50 Per YEA} Persons who send or the money to the office and pay Ir £1 per your CrNrrEe DEMOCRAT clubs with N. ¥Y. thrice-a-week World for Pittsburg Stockman for bring advance The date your subscription expires Is plair ted on the label bearing your name | Deinted are given by a change of latel the first issue of each month, Watch that, after you remit. We send no receipts unless by special request. Watch date on vour label Subscribers changing postofMice address pot notifying us, ure liable for same Subscriptions will be continued, unless other. wise directed : : We employ no collector. You are expected to send or bring the money to this office and EDITORIAL. “Vote for Taft and prosperity.” About 600 blast furnace employes at the four furnaces in Shenango Furnace company at Sharpsville, have cut ten per cent in their wages. Tre way they are going after the G. O. P. grafters in Pittsburg, should be a caution to futu gangsters. It may need a new penitentiary to house the guilty scamps—the name is lacrinm iegion. Tue house, the Stuart road bill road Philadelphis Representative Mever, fr from voted against the me: accord with the entim The H 1SC al increase the Judge ' vle pie. sentative, Mr right again game pages we leading, contradi that even to the interpretation, and parties are in constant danger of prosecution because the game laws are a jumble and mislead | of the courts differ as sportsmen wi s to be law abiding SANDY RIDGE ¢ ¢ The death ang Mathew Reese took away their Margaret, branous crouj Mrs. Mary and relatives in Clearf Mrs. Wm. Conse on Saturday aftern consun phot MILES TWP, PLEASANT VIEW T.B tended Everett's a last week Long savs SHOES for 2 cents a Can the get time to buy them Jerome Spigler DOTSe ast week Charles Grimm will ton this week Next Bunday will be Easter, hope Ed ward Houtz will not forget Easter this year C. L. Grimm's sale was well attended last Tuesday The farmers are busy ploughing. Soon time to fish for trout, Charley Sheats was in town last Sat. urday evening to get some one to finish his mail driving term All like to read the Buffalo Bill story in the C, D, There will, no doubt, be a big wed ding south east of town before long. I would give $3 for the Centre Demo crat a year rather than so cents for the | Gazette 10 years, move to Fleming. LIVONIA. Mrs M. W, Adams has been in Sugar. | valley for the past week at the sick bed | of her mother, who is very low with a complication of diseases, James Hanselman, of Cowan. has| hired out for the summer to John Wolfe. | Mr. Bartges, of Rebersburg, sent an | alarm clock, which he had repaired, with | our mail driver, previously winding up | the alarm, asa Toke. Ed. was so fright i ened when it went off that he has been | bewildered ever since, which is proven | by the fact that he tried to wash his face | in coffee last Sunday. Robert Wolfe was ill with gripp. but is better, Our school closed Friday and both teacher and pupils were sorry to see the last day come, A Busy Holiday. “Naw, I don't think Timmy 'll be stayin’ long on this new job he's took up wid,” sald Mrs, Herlihy, *'Tis too harrd fer Sure, gets no rist at all from Monda' mornin’ til Sathwm da’ night, and what used to “He has his hanzarded the caller boldly, “Au' what o' that?” Mrs hy “On he has to the children to thei wid him he not the m "tis Sundays to 1 sald sSunda's arch an’ take grandmama’s an’ visit his coosh all--'tls no rist at all.” "T'w wan day out of very fortnit he had wid wa'n't it? queried the “It was "twas a the ould job, caller, sald grand save very bit o Mrs, vacation Herlihy, *“a he had. I'd the washin', and he'd wring It fine an' hang it on the line for me; thin he'd saw an’ sh wood enough to last till the nixt vaca tion day, an’ he'd bate Ivery mat the house an’ shine up the faucets a: the b'ller an’ wash the windys, ar there'd be some little exthr: help, drivin’ nails or the like, he cud glve me “An' whin he'd go to bed night he'd niver fall to say to ms ‘Well, Celia, my vacation day 18 ove but I feel like it's made me ready go back to wurrk tomorrer,’ -Youth's Companion out always his he'd say A Great Mystery, There is one great universe somewhere of life, where Is one of God's sect How far its waters flow tell No human feet have streams in wanderl mystery In God flows a founta We Cann tracked ngs, 1 100 Nes ple wa bles” French i of a deer io th teemed In 8S parts of Eng of Pepys was part of the menu of a gentleman's ta is day tland and 1nd “umble pie" the tim served as So ate as { ble an an excraordinAry occasion. Rome writers derive the contumelious use of the phrase “to eat humble ple” fro an ustom of serving the alleged ne salt, « at The Law of Gravitatic poss truer than the fa« that did not pate the | speare’'s fancy and umph of Newton difference the gr substantial sense } Bet wes the sclent there Is an New York Americar Moral Courage. A sel teacher once told that ) { 1ige which makes what kK right, regardless of the neers of others, moral the best “Then If a has a box of I Hke me yesterday.” sald a lad, ° if he eats It all himself Any to people no matter much mean and stingy. that courage, alt it, teacher? her cla us d was courage Kind boy without gi that have no right to how call } there's thes mao The Time Not Ripe. Anxious Patron-Doctor, don't think you'd better call In some other physicians for consultation? Famils Doctor (cheerfully)-Oh, no; not y« There is still some hope. New York Weekly you Endurance Test. “What do they mean by an endur ance test? “Two chars bragging about thelr re spective makes of automobile.” Lou faviile Courier-Journal Gallant, Reautiful Widow Deo yon know, I'in forty years old today?" Gallant Bachelor Madam, twenty I never believe half of wha’ I hear you ar more thm Corrected, Miss Kitty Before you were may ried, Mrs. Blunt, did your husband bring you many Sowers? Mrs. Blan’ «1 didv’t have any husband before | was married, dear. Pessimiem leads to weakness: op timism leads to power. -Willan Tames UNIONVILLE. On the Goth anniversary of her birth day which occurred on the 31st of March, | Gap to his home here last Mrs, Annie E. birth day cards by mail, On next Sabbath there will be Easter services by the Sunday school children, A fine evervbody is mmvited to be Charles McEwan left ! Pittsburg where he has secured a good Stere received 22: gram is being prepared and present, on Monday for job in the Carnegie steel wor ( I= an imdauasiri will to do, Mi Clellan pent S grandpa, (Geo also uncle Ches Howard Pratt and more, arrived home mg train for bairn in Pratt, M. M. Hunter, nis lodge of ModerntW odmen in the rang hall of many more ett Dro pee 1 on Saturday ght, witl oming in soon he failed to his friends would n for murder after the fight Mrs, Dr. Russel has tory, a fine thrifty prese it, 1s bearing about a dozen lemons of different sizes lly matured, ago, that and weighed specimen of one of which, beng fn a few days measured ro by 1; dropped off inches 10 oz. It was as fine a 1 ever | iy (rertrude M Cogan, of Hopewe . will lecture in the Presbyterian church MINGOVILLE, Joseph Herman moved from Pleasant week; glad to welcome them back again, A number of our young people attend ed the commencement held at Hublers burg on Wednesday evening, Rev, Bingham, Ev preaches | day. angelical 1 Irmo ummert hool : Muncy Wilbur unkle came hot the Hu . £4 1 expects to go chool, Monday commencement lersbury DACH morning Samuel Homan is Albert Zin hool HNCAr Iie The 18 Of Kline N mov to ( Decker's farm DeVinney, of Hublersburg house vacated by Mr Wilbur Dunkle acd | both students of the Central mal at Lock Haven, spent their al home with the exception of t ings which were spent in the vi Hublersburg and Snydertown, Albert Zimmerman, teacher at Potters Bank, 14 y } weairom nrist Neff. ank Hockman, 3 State returned home being a groom of several iaturally rather be here Last unto himself a wife means an old man yet hand he i i [ We glory in his spunk and sm both many happy d t word bachelors ¢ week Neff took no spr encouragement tor y hie above 50 » a the A bsolutely Pure Grapes give the chief ingredient, the active principle, and healthfulness, to 0=0~00~0-0~0-0-C~0p When About to Purchase “iA PLOW ? The Genuine Oliver Chilled WORTH TWP THE POTTER-HOY HARDWARE CO. {on next Friday evening, at 7.30. | be-| lieve her lecture will be in the interest of | the YW. CC. 1.1 highest encomiums as a lecturer, from She has received the nent neon el peopi SOBER over m We dnesd A Bride Sprains her Ankle While changing from ne tr another a few days ago a | her ankle very badly afraid she would b for the ankle pained her and rapidly. One of her gers brought her Liniment. The WAS AWE fellow passen Sloan's stopped Swe bottle of ment ) Lini pain At once and took down the and next day she, was as strong as ever Mr. IL. Roland Bishop of Scrant Pa., says:—"On the 7th of this month, asl was leaving the at noon for lunch spraining my wrist, | returned in the afternoon, and at four o'clock I could not hold a pencil in my hand, | return ed home al five o'clock and purchased a bottle of Sloan's Liniment and used it five or six times before | went to bed and the next day I was able to go to work and used my hand as usual. | thought sure I would be laid up, and as we are busy | was very much worried I cheerfully recommend Sloan's Lini ment to all persons who may injure themselves in any way." present building I slipped and fell MILESBURG. Mrs. Nancy Proudfoot is visiting her son Arthur, in Altoona, i Mrs, Clarence Casselberry, of Salem, Ohio, has returned home after visiting her mother for several weeks, Mrs. Emma Bavarr, after visiting her daughter Mary, of Williamsport, has re | turned home, Wm. Cadwell, of Pittsburg, is a guest | of his parents, | The ladies aid society met at the home | of Mrs, Joseph Baird's Thursday even: | ing and presented Mrs, M, C. Piper with | | a hardwood rocking chair. Mrs, Piper {organized this society five years ago, during that time has been the treasurer | of said society; a noble worker she was. has taken her departure for their new [field of labor. Rev. M. C. Piper also | was presented with the same kind of a rocking chair the same evening, from the young men and trustees of the M. E. church, | es ——— Pu |& ARE YOU THINKING OF PURCHASING AN EASTER SUIT ? We have the nattiest®lot of Ythem for the young men ever before shown in our store. servative dresser we have the very neat figures and quiet tones For the con- All the mew SPRING HATS AND SHIRTS | The ladies of the church are sorry she | #re here, and a beautiful assortment of the new colorings in Neckwear. MONTGOMERY & COMPANY.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers