SETTER EVEryT honest county is proud of his rating and we | Ci, ation Over 5,600—Largest in NEWSPAPER MEN HOLD CONFERENCE MUST COMPLY WITH THE POS. TAL REGULATIONS. TAKE STEPS FOR PROTECTION An Important Decision—Persons Are Liable for Papers They Lift From the Postoffice—Unpaid Bills Report- ed to All A meeting of the ount put lis tre « held in Friday, the such steps to thelr following pai Bellefo crat, Centre Hall Watchm Kevstone State C r Times recent the Vers VET Centre Der Reporter, Democrat! Gazette al Republican Journal not represen would affairs publish numit 4 who scribers a 1 and r discontir Abou next meeting held and his Ii the en a gen linquer ts of same lisher will } show ti} a publ not pal practical take a when pa subscribe for ar ! i fessional rounder After looks though it will for a man to take advantage of more than one paper, as he will then be properly rated, and at the end of his man In Centre Were st ther ns De such a course Ission un re will endorse was further 'S | he believe There gard to adopting the collection of ti quent s definite ing We belies Approve dis remarka up by = per for to BAY pubscr) and » offended, for such dis} quiry we I “dead heats in their despised by the : their community While this point wish to eal attention to a special point It In this If you lift a newspaper from the post. a]avol might after _ thers people ment Ommaor and arial nd are « locality usiness people or we office you are liable for its payment. | pay up If you don't want the what you owe and then refuse it after that. For general information we pub Heh herewith a brief synopsis of a RECENT COURT DECISION A court decision has lately been ren- dered In Massachusetts on what cone. stitutes a subscriber. The judge paper, vr, although he never UST PAY for it. It appears that Jas Thompson moved and Willlam Robin pon took Immediate possession of his residence, receiving and pccepting a weekly newspaper that was delivered to him through the malls every week The good-natured editor sent accounts | paid | frequently, but no attention was to them by Mr. Robinson. Finally after Robinson had received the paper for some time, he Informed the collect or that he never subscribed and de clined to pay It. The case was taken to court and the judge questions 4 the defendent, who sald that he had and made use of the paper and was re. celving bills, which were frequently in closed In it. Judgment was rendered in favor of the newspaper. The court f SUrADCY ¥ of | held | that the man who RECEIVED the pa- subscribed, | read | he Lent Centre county. | no specu support ¢ decision 8 based on defined generally «un that you m1 ou accept or pring ple common ts alter rece for sever honesty, ving payment thi deem {it on al meeting proper the public ts transpired We doubt nty in the State Penn und ol can show a bett it than ww that r efforts those ir (Contre the publi from the lit ap eral ch enlovs BASE BALL NEWS, The Will of Martin It is estimated that the Fauble, of Bellefonte, left worth from ninety to one ht sand dollars Some of It is Ir tional bank Nation » store ther Fauble. late indred thou. Iife ir frst stock and some if probated He Mike Meyers in Trouble . 5 } Mike Hospital Notes ving ‘ titted for : Mrs eatment Mrs I Hertha Steels Mrs. Laura | Mins Mary | | ma Minnem Martz and Grove Mills Spring Mills The following submitted to tlong: Miss Millicent Prince, of ton, appendicitis; Elmer Croll, Miles. burg: Mrs. RB B Taylor, Bellefonte removal of needle from foot » Change of Dates. | The Bald Eagle Valley Disciple Sun | day school plenie will be held In Agar's {park on Wednesday, August 24th, In | stend of August 256th The change I» made on account of the Clinton Coun ty Sunday school! convention, which will be held In Trinkty M. E church f.ock Haven, on the 26th and 26th of Aug.: also the Bchenck reunion i» to be held at Howard on the 256th of Au gust, and hence the change of date has been made as these Sunday school workers do not wish to conflict with the convention at Lock Haven War Y ou arr or 'o Mis Mar Mra Elle Em FAdwprd Pine kman Ward He opera Bob Whitmer Wrecks Mis Auto. Robert FF. Whitmer, who Is knbwn lin Bellefonte, figured in a sensational auto wreck last Friday evening on the York road, near Philadelphia. He was | out with his chaffeur in his six eylin | der Lozier, and to avold running down [a small boy on a bieyele, the big tour. ing car was ditched, Mr Whitmer | was thrown against a wire fence and | sustained several cuts and brulses | The chaffeur ecaped with slight In. { Juries. The big car was wrecked, held that it was the duty of the de. | fondant to notify the publisher if he ‘ did not wish the paper, AND TO PAY FOR THE ISSUES HE RECEIVED. i One must admit that he's a pretty | good sort of a man who has accom | plished half the things he intended to Martin | all who held to an estate | Craf- | BELLEFONTE, PA. THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1910. SOME INTERESTING CHURCH HISTORY 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF SALONA LUTHERAN CHURCH. DESERTED THE HESSIAN ARMY Became a Prominent Pastor Who Ser. ved Various Congregations in Centre County-—Rev, Address. Rearick's Historical Church History 3 i ' from |} to house seeking to affiliate the faith of his father In privates home” and in ths open air he preached the gospel qd ted the youn It wale instruc daily iw ine Dr. Green Under the Knife k his ship Stole Conveyence. The Millheim Journal says “On | Baturday evening Fred Coyler, of this place, hired a horse from Livery. man J. Spigeimyer to drive to Mills. While at that place some per- | son stole the horse and buggy and no trace could be found until next morn- ing when the horse with the buggy | was passing through Pleasant Gap on the homeward way, and was later se | oured by Mr. Colyer at the farm on the top of Nittany mountain, near Centre Hall. The person or persons who stole the horse no doubt drove to Bellefonte and then started the horse on his homeward way. There was nothing broken at the buggy War Governor's Nephew Dead. Thomas T. Curtin, about 56 years old, and a ne hew of Andrew Curtin, Pennsylvania's war governor, war found dead in bed in his room the Home hotel, Tuesday afternoon thought to have heen death, Mr. Curtin was born In Pitts burg, and was the son of William and Mary Curtin. He had made his home at the hotel for a number of years He was the Pittsburg representative of a Chicago contracting firm and was | well known in Heart disease The sub-district Epworth League ; convention will be held at Mileshurs | August 26th and 26th, in the M. E i church Spring | Puquesne way, Pittsburg, | in| the cause of his | BUSINESS MEN'S PICNIC. Largely Attended on Tuesday at Hecla Park. Pe. Another nr : iP gy management Harold Hollobaugh Ae olile attentis the peng atiracted n and The nn AUTO'S DEEP PLUNGE Carrying Seven Passengers Over Hig} Embankment nr Mary M Maust 8 perv whe ¢ Lock expected ar his sister suffering from in L Has to Aare sovere or not A recon also but not danger injuries. Mrs. Maust and the children have recovered suf clently to return to thelr home Friday afternoon they paid a vish to some of the cottages at Riverview opposite Farrandsville, and were on their way home when the accident oc. cured In order to get from the Riv erview road onto the road leading te Dr. Maust's cottage it was necessary to back the machine. Dr. Maust had | backed the auto near to the odge the embankment and put on the power to go forward but the machine to respond and continued backing un {til It went over the embankment. In the descent the auto made | complete revolutions. The three dren landed In the ditch at the bottom {of the Incline, while Dr. Maust was pinned under a part of the machine, The ather occupants landed at various points along the embank | ment Ous three A Hugh Spruce Tree From Seaside, Oregon, comes the in | formation that the forests of that far off country abound in trees of large dimen sions. one of which, a hugh spruce cut there last month which measured twelve feet in diameter across its base and was cut into nine logs each thirteen feet in length, and being cut into lumber at the Lumber & Manufacturing com pany s mili, the total measurement was 35.000 feet. Have we anything like it | hore of | falled | several | chil} wrecked | was | rat. NURSES TRAINING SCHOOL COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES WERE HELD ON LAST THURSDAY EVENING. PROVED A DELIGHTFUL AFFAIR How J. C. Meyer Makes the Address ~Dr. Geo. F. Harris Diplomas—Yere Two Efficient Work Done the Graduates— Presents A Railroad Change has taken Rumberger's tern Mr. Run same position ne 1 where book - keep Lime AR RB Ralona : Ome MAnARer er for the Bellefonte sisting of Frank Warfield Harris and W. C. Lingle John I» thoroughly competent and will be a valuable man to take charge of things down there. He will be greatly missed in Bellefonte. He takes the place of W. H. Herr, who resigned as the book. keeper for the Lime company, who will devote his time to something {else. Mr. Munson is an old hand at the business, and will be at home when it comes down to taking care of the Rallroad company’s interests and Co of John P m Nef! Family Reunion. The Wm. H. Neff family, represent ing four generations, met at the home in Howard of Willlam H. Neff and wif, on Wednesday, August 17, and held » family reunion There were about forty of the generation present be. sides 2a number of guests | Willlam MH. Neff was born one and one-half miles west of Howard, Janu. | " He I» the father of elev. | ary 1% 1833, years of age en children, seven of whom are living He name making him almost when he commenced learning the cabinet making and undertaking bus iness at Nittany Hall and Bellefonte During his life and up to the present time, Mr. Neff has buried thousand people. He was & veteran of the Civil war, enlisting February, [186], In Co. A, Sth Regt, P. V, and {served as & prisoner in Libhy and Sallsberry prisons | day | dler | August 25 | 8% | ora | continuous lived on the farm until 17 years of | over three Ling. No. 33. ARRESTED WRONG MAN. A Pec That Embarrassing (‘on { ‘ | uliar Likeness Proved urt House Finishing Touches } good the time carpet ture mahog~ in the attend. iret will nterior new fur: and t and Thos wili or Pe Tribute to a Bellefonte Boy y the Act : gain 3 cman ng to mrber's 3 of ited ke and Keman when y to his ) ered It Wagner at ne time of the Younes revol. bunch The Chey He | ) : WAS tried to get Fuel & Supply comp burglar was searches ver, a palr of pincers and a of keys were found or keys might have giver entrance into some of our od In the lock-up mt \ The w her ™ big hin person him he An ines was pla Post Encampment. Ident. W. W. Hilerly Post. No R., and Major R. H. Foster Sons of Veterans, will hold a » encampment llustrating real sol. life, organizing Thursday, to-day, in Bmull's woods near Reb. ermsbhurg, and ending with the annual pienie and soldiers reunton of Penns and Brush valleys Saturday, August 27. Addresses will be made on the day of the pienic by prominent speak- music by bands and drum corps, entertaining throughout and evening. Sham baftle at m. Everybody invited 6 A Camp, 110 the day 1 o'clock » Schools Open. All departments of the public schools of Bellefonte will open on Monday Sep. tember Sth. Puplis wishing to enter, either from other districts or from the | borough, will be given an oportunity to do so on Friday morning, Septem ber Ind, In the new High school bulld. Examinations for the removal of conditions will be conducted at the same time” Very respectfully, JONAR E WAGNER, Super. Principal.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers