Thursday, January 6th, 1910 THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA, Page 7. ' x —————— ——————— - - . a | AARONSBURG. LEMONT. ! MINGOVILLE. BUFFALO RUN. Everybody COM = C d t 4 Mr, and Mrs. James Weaver and| There has been more ice put away Christmas passed off very quietly Irvin Thomas, while at work in Ju- Carl Furst spent Bunday at his orrespon en 4 Mrs. R. W. Mensch and daughter | up te this time, than was put up dur- here, Everybody seemed to have done | nlata, was injured on & Florence are spending thelr holidays | ing all last winter, Justice to the delicacies provided for Rev. J. R. Miller preached two fine I'he entertainment that was held at with their brother, Elmer Weaver in| Many of the children sre suffering the day. germons last week ut Paradise the Stony Point school, was “ great par men Akron, Ohlo. | with chickenpox, but they will soon be Our friend, Calvin Guiser, boaste Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Hartsock spent | success; the hiume Wil crowded, even James Swabb, of Tusseyville, spent | all at school again that any of the gifts that may have Christmas in Altoona standing room was taken up I'he re- Continued the Sabbath with his mother | Dennis White and wife went to Lock | been tendered by either the Goulds, Miss Helen Clark, of Juniata, pald | citations and dialogues were certainly - V af ave; | Hay ] rr y has a g Morgans or the Vanderbilts are not in | a visit to her friends here fine —-— Nellie Mingle was home a few days; | Haven last week, where he has a good ; | § 4 ; vit. - always glad to see her Among: her | position, it with his Christmas present His| Miss Elsie Hartsock spent a few Mz John Btine, while at his work at POTTER TWP.—Potter Mills. | many friends { Many people from town attended Was a little baby girl. | days at home last week : i" Scotia, got nis as X punt very aay, Squire Carson made a business trip Ebon Bower, of Bellefonte, spent his | Mrs. Mary Maye's funeral on Monday, December 23rd was the close of the There will be preaching on 16th, | whic was nid him up for a wh Christmas week with his parents, mer- | Christmas brought the first sleigh | very successful revival meeting, con tO Milroy vn Monday. Ruth and Nons smuch spent the holi- days with Iriends at aAxeman aud hecla Fark. Lhey report having a de- lghtiul tune, Mike Grove and daughter Bessle, of Spring Mis, passed thnough our town On daturday, on their way to Muthin CounLy. Harry Wilkinson is spending a few days with his sister, Mrs. Bubb, of Keedsville, Mr, and Mrs, Thomas and son Ash bridge have returned (rom thelr trp 0 New York Dr. H. 8. Alexander and family spent Christmas at the Dr's home in Miglin county. All the brothers and sisters and grandchildren were pres ent. Howard Ripka, of Mifflin county, was In our town on Mouday. Earl Smith spent Saturday and Sun day with his uncle at Spring Mills, Colyer. Mr. and Mrs. James Swabb and daughter Mildred attended the funer- al of Mrs. Swabb's father, Mr, Fryer, of Coburn. Mrs. Willlam Minnich and sons Charles, Lester and Lloyd, of Hu- blersburg, spent a week with her sis- ter, Mrs. A. lL. Slutterbec. Miss Clara Relber spent a few days with her Iriends, Misses Roxanna and Mannie Kline, of Manor Hill Mrs. Howard Fetterhoff, of Centre Hall, spent Christmas with her grand- parents, Mr. and Mrs, Henry Shadow. Master Boyd Jordan, who was ill with a mild form of typhoid fever, is again able to call among his many friends Ernest Jordan, of Fruittown, is learn ing the blacksmith trade with Samus Stitzer, of Spring Mills. Ernest wil make a first class me Miss Sara Horner, Colle ge spent a few days wi rents at this place. Mrs. Mahala and sor ha Nevel and attended the h ni beér's, also and family visited her son Fruittown. went awa Miss Mas = fer: ’ I. her n Clara and Blanche Reiber Lydie Ishler 8 emploved at the home of G Lee, for the present loyd Jordan has recovered tk of phd Mer. He ! n with his from the was abl ay grandma ye { ’ tom ’ @ . 1 : a [| : 1 al } * ® had a = . their teacher f at he r A 8] | STATE COLLEGE AY i ‘ rir gram eo het { : ! f nds here las \ r } Or Mond There wor fifteen hundred grangers here the week before Christ mas and bout five hundred farmers here last week Our laundry shut down dur the holidavs f ) : acation, and to mak BONY repalrs Th Ref | NEregation held snent sever LYS mong friends at M ’ i pet voenk Mrs. Mary R. Bec) nd Mra Fye were guests at Mr. and Mme. OF 3) 8 on Bunday for dinner | Irivers of the Automobile Co ha themselves togred with a silver badge The skating rink Is well attended ev- ery evening The Reformed ongregntion held services in the Lutheran church on Bunday evening The thaw on Sunday helped the streams which had been very low. Our town was almost threatened with n water famine Luther Fye, one of our leading mer chants, presented his wife with a fine Rew plano for a Christmas present Mrs. Mary B. Beck and daughter Wilda, and Paul Heverly, spent sever. al days among friends and relatives Inst week at Howard William Stone left Friday on the lookout Heo was express agent for Altoona on for a better job here. Mr. Min. gle In at present fllin AR £ his place as ~Ex-sheriff D. WwW Woodring has about recovered from what might have of pneumonia. | been a serious attack He just got it checked In time. b A i ~Kline Woodring, Esq. who for the | year or more had been suffer. | ing and inconvenienced by wea has #0 far recovered that on + A he discarded his glasses with the Ys. Hef that the return of his eye-sight will be permanent. Let's hope that eyes may get mo strong that he oan see a dollar, on a stick, a mile awiy, A —————— A man can keep his wife at home simply by refust to hook dress for hor, | T up:char Pins with his me chant E. A. Bower's, Charles Ocker, of Holsopple, was the | welcome guest of his parents, How- ard Ocker’'s. Magdalena Weaver spent a week with her brother, C. A. Weaver, at Co- burn, Ernest Stover, our busy hunter, has shot and caught twelve fine foxes Frank Guisewite and family, of Feidler, spent a day with his brother- in-law, J. G, Weaver Lena Bresslerof Centre Hall, Is spending some time with her uncle, Wm. Harter, on North 2nd street Quite a little excitement in our burg on New Year's Day, by a few of our boys getting up a fantastic display Everything was nics and orderly Clyde knows how to take care of his best girl Will MceClintie and wif of T.o« Haven, spent a few da with |} brother-in-law, Hal, Crous: Clarence Eisenhour and brother Philip, of State College, are spending a few days under the parental roof Walter Orwig returned home fron Altoona, after spending some tim it the latter place Mive of ur young will leave tomorro ! State College Misses 1 Bessie Stover, Jenni MeCall nd Ardrer are sorry to see them +) r Wert e Rupj 1s wer's A girl was buried 31st, in Reforr 1 cer I D. Ix WINGATE. ™ cold weather la 1 But J ! t na ' t! } \\ “ { | A [| | { Kg “ { r A 4 y ' \ { Pitealr sy here he expects to seek of ployment Blair Fisher, of Tyrone, spent Christ CWP Bellefonte where she expe GREGG TWP.—~North Precinct. J } } th | Par } | h ! tir Ward Ke S : wit Ris i $k : b Al rt Cra ‘ « " o ' ] f ’ y J | ¥ ~ ' } { ] {ing of the Prof. Thos, C spent a few days friends last week Miss Mary Baker where will spend Edward Lingle the holidays at the nelius Dale The teaches again this week Philip Bradford Sunday in the loop Fost, G. A. R., will hold a Saturday afternoon to new roecru very ir season Houtz, of Selinsgrove, visiting among to Kansas winter family of Mrs. went the and she spent home Core rea are all back to work and family spent Foster meeting itinte There was a ily at the h of Mr Mrs iatheate Lemont Christmas da heir oldest gon Earl having returned home from on in a Tow is fame and teresting gathering MN. ines, bel JULIAN, T i MADISONBU RO. ' J. KH. R h and } : : : ’ & p ‘ : * + a) rT alt f : No ~ a ¥ pia | k & ple w font WwW. Kins | i kA : ducted by Rev. Bingman of Nittany, at this place, During this meeting fifty two conversions were made. This un- dounbtedly has been a great success A subscription was taken up among the people of this and Hublershurg charges of the I'nited Evangelical church for a Christmas present for thelr pastor, Rev, Bingman A beaut! ful robe and a pair of driving gloves as well as a sum In ready cash were presented to him for which he is ver thankful Wilbur R. Runkle, a student from the Lock Haven State Normal, spent his Christmas ia tion at his par 1 hom re 43 Workman Christmased t ! brother 1 Altoona I. H feM n and ter Lulu efr culated ar g friends f Chris " Samuel H Is paid 1} mother Lock Haven Lt on ( t J. £ (8 0 ind if £1 k Ha Pa Christn wed] th her parent I | Peters It ported that Ji ned ten j 1 Aur } Lit { her { I 5 mp took d vit ols § Alte t lam Christn (*} Hi 1 Bert } to tf Tol ir here tl xpect t emplovn t In the r Elie Ric} nd fe and ‘ { AT { f H ‘ { Vi i Smith of " r { 8 at 1} } 1 8 } I lensa ’ an ¢ 8 the f p vir ty t n : 4 ' RA intt L 8 f My tl D. Peters tool ! D [ 4 { ( } |B t Ww ’ BENORE. THE BAZAAR Will 3 ‘ } f in Al , I.n ute Ginghams at a p i H hont mn A . Gin J. 8. GILLIAM, Bellefonte, Pa. Allegheny Street Prop be At the old prices rom Arctic to Tropics in Ten Minutes No oil heater has a higher efficiency or greater heating power than the PERFECTION Oil Heater (Equipped with Smokeless Device} With it you can go from the cold of the Arctic to the warmth of the Tropics in 10 minutes. The new Automatic Smokeless Device prevents smoking. There is no possible question about it. This means greater heat-power, a more rapid diffusion of heat and a sure conversion of all the heat-energy in the oil. In a cold room, light the heater and in 10 minutes you'll have a glowing heat that carries full content. Turn the wick up as high as it will go—no smoke—no odor, In everything that appeals to the provident and the fasudious, the Perfection Oil Heater, with its new automatic smokeless device, de» “ cisively leads. Finished in Nickel or Japan in various styles, Every Desler Everywhere. If Not At Yours, Write for Descriptive Circular 10 the Nearest Agency of the THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY — (Incorporated ) YEAGER'S SHOE STORE BELLEFONTE, PENNSYLVANIA. RUBBERS COME HERE FOR YOUR RUBBERS »: : + z.5 .: Last month, Puffed Puffed Rice were served for seven- teen million meals. Did you ever know foods to come so quickly into such popular favor? Yet there are many still who don’t use them—many who have never tried them. They simply what they miss. ’ . I 3 : CENTRE MILLS. y Ww . 4 se IN h a r Mi Minr Kline, who has been en a slow) mproving gaged In Evangelistic work In the { ¥ Ye k's saw mill is rur gl enstern part of the state, and Arthur n full blats Kline and family, of Altoona, spent Rome Wf our peopl attended the Christmas with thelr parents, Mr. and ate mee § nN) Madisonburg « Mrs. J. A. Kline, of here Frida oY e The family of Howard Weaver gave Fe Mel ghiin preached ar abl A part to a imber of their friends sermon in the 8t. Paul United Evar on Christmas evening gelical church on Sunday The Misses Eva and Miriam Moyer nd In Moyer spent Christmas DIX with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jo- Miss Bessie Peters. a bright and ac seph Mover omplished young Indy of this place Mra. Orlanda Weaver spent Batur- who Is employed In Tyrone spent | day at Miltheim Christmas at her home FA Miller's family entertained I. R. Behers, who Is employed In| twenty of their Millheim friends last Pitealrn, was seen here on Christmas | week one evening evening with his lady friend. Bessie Mrs. Harvey Limbert, who has been Peters confined to her bed for some time with Mra. Scott Johnson Is visiting her rheumatism, is able to be up and brother at Lemont about again The station at this place, was en closed, and a stove placed It will be Of course a woman should share quite a great thing for the persons her trouble with her husband. It traveling on the train helps him to forget his i Wercome Worns 10 Women Women who suffer with disorders peculiar to their sex should write to Dr, Pierce and receive free the advice of a physician of over 40 yours’ experience «a skilled and successful specialist in the diseases of women. Every letter of this sort careful consideration and is redarded as soc redly Many sensitively modest women write confidential, fully to Dr, Pierce what they would felling to their local physician, wit " “an examination, own home, only one The local physician retty sure to say that he cannot do anything Dr. Pierce holds that these distasteful examinations are generally needs less, and that no woman, except in rare cases, should submit to them, Dr. Pierce's treatment will cure you right in the our His ** Favorite Prescription’ of thousands, some of them the worst of cases, to Jo the only medicine of its kind that is the product of regularly gradusted has the mort shrink from of cured sealed guns, Then the guns That fierce heat turns the mendous. Seventeen Million Breakfasts Shot One taste of these crisp, gigantic grains makes one a convert forever. They are irresistible foods. Puffed Wheat—10c¢ These are the foods invented by Prof. An- derson, and this is his curious process: The whole wheat or rice kernels are put into sixty minutes in a heat of 550 degrees, grain to steam, and the pressure becomes tre- Made only by The Quaker Oats from Guns Wheat Think of whole wheat or rice ker- nels puffed to eight times natural size ~—made four times as porous as bread. Think of crisp, brown, nut-like grains which are ready to melt in the mouth. Think of cereals with the starch granules so broken that the digestive juices act instantly. The most whole- some, most enticing cereal foods in existence. Don’t you want to know, and to let your folks know, the goodness of these new foods? Puffed Rice—15¢ and don't know » Then the guns are unsealed, and the stea explodes. Instantly every starch granule blasted into a myriad particles, The kernels of grain are expanded times. Yet the coats are unbroken, the are unaltered. We have simply the ¢ grain. : One will tell you why light in them, Order it now, are revolved for moisture in the
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