—— The Centre Democrat. ————————— Circula®se Over 5500—Largest in Centre County, AN BELLE SECOND WEEK OF COURT PROCEEDINGS MANY CASES WERE DISPOSED | OF. | COURT ADJOURNED WEDNESDAY Jurors All Discharged and Allowed to | Return to Their Homes—Unusually | Large Number of Civic Cases—Some | Were Continued. | The following cases were disposed of since last week's issue of the Dem- ocrat: James Gheret, prosecutrix Rubie M, | Cowher, charge, betrayal. Settled. | Wallace Moore, prosecutrix, Harriet | Green, charge, betrayal, continued. | Cloe Heverly, prosecutrix, Annie Wagner, charge betrayal, continued. Joe Wolf, prosecutor, H. H, Kline; charge assault and battery, true bill | and continued, | Lucy Ryan, prosecutor, John W.| Mowery. Charge extortion, true bill and continued owing to the absence of the defendant being in the state of | Ohio. | Jacob B. Lucas; prosecutrix Eva | Lucas, charge abduction, nol. pros, | entered. College constable of official Patton H. | returned by the | of the township for neglect duty. Continued, township returned by con- stable the township, neglect of of- | ficial duty. Continued. Wilbur Schenck, prosecutrix, Mam- fe Keeler, charge betrayal. Settled. G. W. Fink, prosecutrix Mrs. Fink, charge desertion and non support. Continued to time to be fixed for hearing before the court. Frank Smith, prosecutrix T. Smith; charge, desertion support. Continued to a fixed for a hearing before William Stark, alias prosecutor, John Gala; ceny, nol. pros. entered. James Reed, prosecutor William Reed Charge, drunkennesa, pros. entered. Si Thompson, Sharrer; charge, ¢ Nol. pros. entered. Pat McGartney or Gordy; prosecu- trix, Rena Whiteman; charge, betray- | al. Settled } Harry McCulley, prosecutrix, Fan- nie Stiner; charge, betrayal. Contin- ned, Elmer Jackson, prosecutor J D, state Fish Warden. Charge | impersonating officer. Continued Court irned on Thursday morn- | ing rdict was rendered for the the of Etters eof al Jamber Company. Proceedings of Second Week. | Court: convened on Monday morning | at ten o'clock and after hearing some . wand petitions the let for the week was called over and the follow Ing cases disposed of } The Pittsburgh Pla EY . corporation, ve, Eds $ Yer, action in township of Roberta and non | time to be the court. Buck Stark; charge, lar- Nol Christ trees, | prosecutor, itting timber Sizer, adio after ve defendant in ve, Centre | Case [| OTs Mrs Fads Cherr the k *rins tiff in change endorser fendant to cover ortEags and her h there cedent tiff and IR was rendered in fs for debt, interest mission of $310.43 J. I. Wagner vs Berryhill J Winslow, W Went ret an act} note held loaned The names been gned defendants and the testimony excepting the of the directors sociation And timony the building In be hn H Ar BT t) at last of named the defendant the were associa of fund tion from Ing evening the retar defendants to a thought note Was “ pla tier te the n the money borrowed f the as he authority The entered and the association neq Ening the 1p juaggment thelr gut pequently execution lssued and property sold by the sheriff. after which the defendants petitioned the court to open the judgment as against them Individually, and the judgment was opened, and this trial being for the purpose of determining whether or not the defendants were lable on the note under the condition of the signing thereof. Three of the de-! fendants were present in court, de- nied the authority of the secretary to sign their names to the note, togeth- er with the ratification subsequent | thereto, Verdict on Tuesday after | noon in favor of the plaintiff for $266.30 as against A. R. Moon, George Berryhill, John Morrison, Thomas Winslow and G. 8. West, and in favor of the defendant as to W. H. Austin. B. Annie Fogleman now B., Annle Walker vs. Christian Lowrey, Admr. d bn of F. D. Fogleman, deceased, Eing an action to revive the lien of (Continued at bottom of next col.) AIM nots with | The | with clubs, {of a physician, lirfous | had | the | monetary | taken {| treatment. | characte | for holding the | sessior | Pennsylvania; { school | as fol | Mon land R, One Student in Hospital After Fight at State College. One of the worst class rushes that has taken place since the campus rush | | NEW YORK NEWSPAPER GIVES POTTER Twp. ciTizEN Accusep of everal years ago was pulled off Tuesday night between the underclass- men says the State College Times. freshmen had a mass meeting scheduled and the sophomores under- took to put them out of business, The freshmen were game, and stood the knocks for a while turned tables and rushed their periors for all they were worth ing the melee a number were badly injured by but su - of freshmen being ed an and rendered hour, despite unconscious for the attention while another was de- all day Wednesday Hundreds of others received minor injuries, some of which for a time looked rather serious for the victims, Those who saw the was the most brutal altercation they ever witnessed. Such action on part of the sophomores should not be condoned hy the college auothor! ties, for had it occurred in any other town the offenders, at least some of them, would have been rounded up by the police. As well thinking men the trustees should action in the matter and deal o mary justice. Such acts lege no good and might loss, poor freshman had in Saturday's scrap to the close crap say that it college take 3 do One broken his and Bellefonte hosg hip was ¢ for ital The young men should stop and con- sider the great danger In acts of this and what it would mean to a life taken, The is too great and should be eliminated sports, them f ware danger of violence all acts college TEACHERS! INSTITUTE. however, | Dur- | struck | One had his head lacerat- | over { element | from | LIVELY CLASS SCRIMMAGE. 'HERALD'S CANVASS | POINTS T0 WILSON. SUMMARILY, REMOVED ELECTION TO JERSEYMAN. | | An Interestitng Forcest of the Com: ing Presidential Taft Newspaper—Indications that Wilson's Majority Will Be Large. | An established feature with the N¢ w York Herald is to make a political forecast each presidential year prior {to the election This is accomplishe by the Herald's v army pondents over the enti ing straw vote and the every instance hown the I litical affairs The Heral iident i 4 staunch and ement 1st re $ in # Of of po Pre porters on Sun The | COrTrespon( | decided through out Breat loss trend the COUraging Democrats sa Are velt Re H well men publicans TT he 5.1 Will Be Held in Bellefonte, November | T1, 11th to 15th, Preparations are now 1 coming Cs teacher's institute in Hel ing the week boginning > and ending on the 15th is will tea held House, under ths dire Superintendent D. O The instructors that hs been ‘ude the following dean if COolieges Dr Ky.. Prof. C inspector for Pennsylvan R. Shearer, Poughkeepsie Byron W. King Pittsburg. evening entertainments will lows Monday—Albert EE Wig- gan, lecture "lL, re and Sense”; Tuesday —Byron WwW. King lecture, Modern lLears and Macheths”: Wed- nesday-—Dr. John M. Drie lecture, "America Facing the Far East”; Thursday Weatherwax Quartetts, Accident F Tyrone Paper Mill, George Diehl, aged 45, of Tyrone, was terribly scalded while he was at rk In the Tyrone paper mill late lay morning, when a tube in a boller burst and hurled a large quan ties » > a J § He wae fonte vember usual Ave Ar- for in Holmes, Green, Koch, High 8 : Dr The Supt Y N © or w steam r tha Alt am} pital and Pope's Doctor Dead. Jia Petac f ope im am id Ing 1d frisky it thi th ad] vr off it that it was his fault After the team was on 14 of the plaintiff, one Maude was been a kicker befo ad ace quire title to her While the test) mony of the defendant is corborative of the plaintiffs testimony to this goes farther that the defendant no knowledge of this mare being icker and that there was no mise resentation or fraud on the plain in far as the defendant is con cerned, nor that he had not known of her having been a kicker Verdict on Wednesday afternoon in favor of the plaintiff for $125 subject to the ques. tion of Inw reserved by the court W. F. Kessinger ve. Martha J. Kes. singer, being an action brought divorcee Cause discontinued. William Witmer va, J. F. and Samuel Garner, being on an opened judgment, pending settlement, J. W. Bruss vs T. Comley, who survive Aus- tin W. Swisher, deceased, action In assumpsit to recover on an injunction bond. Before jury sworn the question was ralsed that not all of the obligees in the hond were made plaintiffs in the action, Plaintiff then suffered a voluntary non sult. At this point all jurors for the week were discharged and court adjourned, The only forelgn counsel present dur. ing this term of court was C. 8. Me- Cormick during the first week of court, and J, J. Kintner during the present week of court, both of them members of the Clinton county bar, premises i hem called kicker and that she had fore the defendant 1} of t a r 1 ox a Kk reg tier so Garner Continued Roland C, re | Bowling | be | Brothers, | for | an action | Bwisher | being an | ald's | tion COTrrespor of G running thir eleven st Were in the | Onto fnten taken, Pennsylvania President and as in shows | Herald, low, slate the eleve | Herald, |} addition to the mentioned, in New York, | Maryland, Indians, West Virginia. A comparison is made between figures collected this year 68 | of 1908, and the Herald found sentiment had shifted considerably mine the last time Taft was a ie nr the ur conduct New Jerse Kentuc Ky CRNOVRAER Wie Delaware, e wna Penney vasa in t t it e Her Ah War Died From Overdose of Chioral ard Hrownlee x tread : oF 3 ! ¢ ‘ OImis W b n A re verdict as aged 34 mother nis mers quest above in YOArse, mix the Un the Wed and is } brothers and hre ” intter lonviil Din nesday 4] isters, among Hiere of in n made Salona o was pis at Frightfully Scalded. ident irred on of Mr. and Mrs residing Marsh Blanchard dis- by their oungest child, A year was perhaps fa- scalded. The child was lying in a cradle in the kitchen and the moth- er placed a bucket containing very hot water close to the cradle and then went to the well to get cold water to cool it In order to wash pore tions carpet. During her abe Renee vy got up on the side of the which rocked over and threw the little tot into the bucket of hot w which upset The in- fant was terribly scalded all over the head, neck, arms and upper portion of the body, A physician was at once procured who relieved the suffering of the child as much as possible, but recovery is very doubtful, Baby tressing a 00 in the family James on bove ROE old side tor Sugar Valley Resident Dead. Henry H. Bixler, a well known resi- den! of Caroll, Sugar valley, died sud- | denly from apoplexy last Wednesday, aged 74 years. While cutting wood {shortly after the dinner hour, Mr, Bixler was seized with a severe pain in his head. {and shortly after telling his wife of | his 1liness, he fell over unconscious [and never rallied, He is survived by five children, William Kessinger, of Nittany val- ley, was admitted to the Lock Haven hospital on Saturday as an operative patient, ~8tar Course opening, Friday, Oc- tober 11th, Election Made by | He went into the house | TAFT WILL RUN POOR THIRD EPIDEMIC OF HOG CHOLERA | Result states and] ’ | Lucas, Runs Me; CTIONABLE BRI DGE OF USING DYNAMITE, | in Bevere Loss to James Kar- Stetter—Sixty-five Valuable Porkers | Either Died or Were Killed to Pre- vent Spread of Disease. Jot Taylor, a resident Winship, was held in $500 bail his ance at next term of court by re Musser on Saturday follow nearing in the h Mr, Taylor w brought by of P for {ter ire Ae #8 office, nt ! in in the fend { mmonwenlth him the In ng in Mr tness Hog Cholera Epidemic. sr 1} % t w ! ¥ ‘ Pas Nee an of We An 3 exam ind that ney Bn at which he {« were soe badly Infected that it iid be necessary to kill them, to avent furthes spread, which was ac- “imply done, This [eft twenty hogs which were a®ected and these VRC nd # then have died YOAr ag ng hogs ne 01 ’ not Ir. Nissley nd tat Wr noe ne Karstettler Guards. the Wes Prisoners Work Without hi $yas ’ A rider pa id that =» { the prison- thers m time men may Ithful it ) Lg A Tw na fr taken im the place order rought here in bene time, ore « the fr r work State's Oldest Man Lives at Howard, Hustler Howard can having oldest resident in state and it only through the rts of his s« John that it was learned that Mr George A Jacohs one of our good citizens, was born on April 9th. 1 which make him 111 age last April We always al he in the nineties not know until the re met his son that he the white man in the state, If not the UU, RB Mr. Jacobse is still In Ad health and nearly day he ke down town for his mail. He is BU very lively and always has a good word for every he meets, Outside his hearing he is well preserved and is likely to live several years more. He has been married twice and has raised a large family of children most of whom are still living. SAYSe the wWaR n he at of R01 th Was did writer WAR every Ww ong Of Hospital Notes. for treatment: Gilbert Coleville, aged 6; Mrs. Minnie Mrs, Cora Gill, Ju- Admitted King, lan, Operations: William MeGovern, of Bellefonte; Walter Hugg, Milesburg, Aged 9 yoars, A son was born to Mr. Thomas Shope, Milesburg. Willlam Craig, Scotland, Pa, stu- dent at State College, Injury to head during foot ball practice, Allegheny Synod Now in ion. The Arhony Synod of a: Relical Lutheran church will meet In seventy -second convention today Johnstow and will continue in 8ession over the Sabbath, and Mra, | Mr | Ar Were | parsonage at | me mony holy I Wan : Miss Ida were by May a pleasant a i: } thelr over he sea of Vol, 35. No. 39, — MARRIAGES, Rhine—Gingery. | Rhine of Ty Ginger of All ert lersville, and | Ping Station, married in Lock Haven last week | Iderman E, K. Parsons Buttorff——Shank, Tuesday afternoon, of William G Buttorff M. Bhank, both of united in matrimony Weaver, at the United on Willow Bank | | On last week, | and Miss | tellefonte, | by Rev. A. | vangelical street, nk Lannen—Fisher. On Baturdey evening, September 28, the parsonage of the United Evan- Heal church, Clintondals the cere- was pron which joined in matrimo hearts and lives Jone H of Hublersburg, and Miss BB Fra her f Nittany Of be O mmced f VOYARS n pleasant ana napp malty Wells—Davis. bet} im ire home in Minnemyer—Shank, ceremony 0} ' § Whi 1GINs h 1 iI known of this Thursday ck ( i at Ring wetting emyer pa Minnemy afternoon ities, hia, New tor ern rm fam- Gratifying to Her Many Friends. Monday's | H Express speaks in this f al X riaven gr 4 manner 4 "nt Mr brought to the lock Haven hos pital In a rather serious condition and upon advice of Dr. F. PP. Ball y Iady Fred 3 he re { noted surgeon of this city, she submit. ted 1 Mrs. Yocum had an internal afl 1 notwithstand- 4 an operation 1h heen treats ar “A r After super rim ft Low t ' patien " linagreed m ¢ ne fr . Found Dead Deer on mor n n Sund severa running, and the wae heard jeer RR £3 a is ight, it Three Days Aviation for Lock Haven. The citizens of lock Haven ooking forward to three days of classy sport next week, in the form of aero plane flights by aviator Walter E Johnson. Thursday, Friday and Sat. urday are the days on which Mr Johnson will mae his flights from the driving park grounds, The bhi- plane hag already arrived in the ty and BOON the operator arrives will assembled and tested, In ad dition to the fights there will be a number of horse and other con tosta The fact several Look Haven women have application compapny the his air and will be 1 to do so add considerable the are nw as be rnd that made aviator allowe« novelty to A When the Pie Was Opened. Following his usual custom of eat in a lunch before retiring C. M Dubbs, a railroad emptoye residing at Altoona, sat down Monday morning to enjoy a good-sized pie he had pur- | chased at a nearby restaurant. Imag- ine his surprise and disgust, when about to take a bite of the delicious morsel, to see the head of a dead mouse sticking out from between the crusts of the ple he held in his hand. It required the services of the family physician to induce Mr. Dubb's stom- ach to remain where nature had plac- ed It, Keeler is Little Concerned. The Clearfield Republican says that John Keeler, the assassin of Joseph Roessner, the brewer, is tak things quite easy in jail and has little or nothing to say about his plans for defense, the | THE COST OF LIVING HERE AND ABROAD A FEW COMPARISONS THAT ARE SIGNIFICANT. OUR INCREASE THE LARGEST Some Striking Comparigons—How Tariffs Increase Prices—~Wool Tar- il Robbs People—Food For Thought ~Testimony From Abroad. If our tem is “substantial” ation of normal in« the nit Btlates hi Com | not the the ab- of living does It under free in 10 under ” re cont in a. prices ner cent cent 5 own "Ex- other Cost United States prices English prices 104 0 1889 1500 5 1901 AVL 1902 . 02 BO BO 20 BS BO -3 ~2 -~ figures Unit- the the Fy year the in st of faken as hat in t | £1 $1.343 in 1906 king Comparison. r home thie Te Detr Winds By not being “pr 4 sor man pays 315 for a suit that the Detroit man will find { ficult to duplicate What the Wir this Instance f 44 ¢ the YWind- of thes it dir- for IN, escaping in Pa fax d all-woo) re as in quality in ldrich BO isor man A vv nd or the ne ents ent. « n the ve ‘ Wool Tarif Rob Then a w An re he s Women. pen § reiresent epre ! per cont p ge of goods Germans Admit Tariff Increases Prices ; ; in- of 1902, 1t pub- tom in of the This de. the fol- When the German Government AR A es of to 18 ity in- aries of ted States Always Added to Cost. Ital and me other mu- on the w Lies ne every instance « amount of the duty The pens in trade between nat Some Testimony From Abroad. In Holland there no import ties on food or materials, the sole protective element being a tax of cent on imported manufac- { tured goods. In Germany there is a high duty on food and an excessive tariff on a the necessaries of life. A household of grix can buy for $5.04 In OCGelderland (one of the eastern provinces of Holland) the necessaries of life which In Germany, ust acrosg the frontier, would cost $6.78 Ar a result a village of 4,000 inhabitants has grown up at Glaner- burg near the German frontier There German manufacturers have | built houses for a colony of their workmen, because they can live more cheaply and better across the frontier {in the foreign country, where there fare practically no import duties, Look at Your Label. This week all persons who paid money to this office on subsecrip- | tion during the month of September, | will find credit given them on the {label of their paper. Kindly look at the date of-your label and note If it ia correct. Any errors should be re- ported at once to this office, so that they may be rectified. arly game ones hap- | du- are mw per 1" persons An Impoctant Decision. In a decision ndered In United States court Judge Ray holds that the Supreme Lodge, Knights of Pythias has no right to increase the | ment of any insured member. in decision affects all fraternal organisa- tions,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers