Thursday, January 15th, 1914, THE CENTRE DEMOCR AT, BELLEFONTE, PENNA. . Correspondents Department Continued. FILLMORE. Last Sunday was a very In the evening it became a large number of people were thus able to attend the revival service at this place, which has been a success. Rev. C. CO. Shuey, assisted by Rev, Stover, is carrying the meeting on at this time. Sleighing is fine broken and everybody use of it by attending ing. T. GG. Lomison, wife and four chil- dren returned home on Minday from James Huey's after attending the fun- eral of Mrs. Lomison's son, Hamil Huey. Earl lime at week, cold milder day. and since the road is is making good revival meet- unloaded a car load the siding at this place Roy Crust also unloaded a load lime at Seller's siding week. These farmers know what good for the land. It is certainly a pity for man who came to our town urday night to hig girl, working at the home of the young man's brother. We don't know if he was storm-stayed or love-stayed, but he didn't met back to his work till Tuesday forenoon. It certainly is a bad ailment, The deep snow is very birds and wild fowls of for they cannot get very much food to eat. The turkeys and pheasants should be fed, 20 as to keep them from starving. After while the hun®rs and sportsmen will be complaining about no game in the woods. They should get busy and protect it Monday night of week Wm Bodle, of Hunter's Park, wrought 1 sled load of voung folks and aged people to preaching service Among them was Andy Gummo, and when they were on their way home just opposite J. C black - smith shop, the sled was upset and Mr. Gummo was badly hurt; the sled box with nearly all the crowd his body His back hurt is not able to his right hope Mr. Gummo be around again On last car this iS Crust of the young last Sat. see who $8 on the the woods hard last Rockeyv's was and We able to De use will soon We are sorry to hear of Miss lizzie | Wolfred, being the sick list. We hope she will be soon be b to be around Mrs. E. A. Peter daughter, Mrs. H wood, son C toona Mr State Peters on Ww ind . Mrs Har iege, and [8 home RE. full WOLF'S STO Winter is upon i Geo. B. Wate has this place to Henr) Sugarvalle who will next spring. Mr Showers is father of our merchant, Geo. Showers Mr. Wate will have public later and go west to live in the community where their daughter, Jessie, lives, The recent heavy snow wrought havoc with some buildings. The porch and some other buildings on the Ben} Haffly farm, and Harry Ziegler's woodshed went down Clarence Brungart, butcher, and wife, spent last with his parents at this place Winklebiech's saw mill is not in op- eration at present, owing to the deep Beds the woods. 8. V. Stover and family were sud- denly called to Farmers Mills last week on account of the illness of Mrs Stover's mother Ricker Bros. were through ley last week buying which continues inging high G. C. Auman on the sick nursing carbuncles on the back of his neck. He is under doctor's care Lioyd Lose this week moving to Pennsvalley, along Pine Creek. We presume he will work for Moyer Bros and at leisure catch suckers. Lloyd is a jolly good fellow and Wolfs Store will miss him We wish him suc in his new community No ke has been from Weaver's dam anxious to get at it, 1 heavy enough Farmers are their wheat. Present bushel, move 3 sai the Loganton Sunday our val cattle prices list, heel th the is ess vet stored or very market cents a beginning to price 20 AXEMANN. We are having a good old-fashion- ed winter this far and good sleighing. Mrs. A. J. Hoover, of Juniata, v t- ed friends at this place last week Miss Susie Confer, a trained nurse of Philadelphia, visited at the homes of W. 8 White and James Somers, over Sunday Curtis White spent a his wife and parents at Altoona Jerry Donovan overseer of the ler's place Mrs. Andrew Kuhn is visiting friends at Spring Mills, a few weeks The ladies’ Union auxiliary met xt the home of Mrs. E. Ei. White on Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rishel accom- panied their daughter, Miss Sarah, to Pittsburg on Saturday where she en- tered a hospital for treatment for blood poisoning, her condition being very serious. Her many friends join in wishing her a speedy recovery Mrs. Arthur Taylor returned to her home at Milton after a pleasant visit with her mother, Mrs. B. A. Scanlon, at this place Mrs. Uriah Stover, visiting at the er and family 18 davs with is employed few he appointed Kel- been in Harry has poor of Pittsburg, is home of Martin Stov- this week LYONTOWN. Charles King and brother Oliver, of Coleville, Sundayed with their par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. King. The social held at the home of Wil- liam Lyons was largely attended and proved quite a SUCCess. Visitors that Sundayed at Mr. and Mrs. Ethan Tierney's were: Miss Rose Hanes, of Ridgeway: Miss May Auman, of Bellefonte, and Miss Mar- garet Nyman, of Mount Eagle. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shultz, of Cur- tin, attended the social and did jus- tice to the good th'ngs of the evening. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Lyons and son Homer, of Curtin, Sundayed with the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Lyons, Victor Moyer, of Pleasant Gap, vis- ited his aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. William Lyons. There seems to be some attraction: how about it, L.7 Miss Cecil Tierney has gone to Bellefonte to resume work at the shirt factory. Dr. A. D. Wolfinger, of Philadelphia, secretary of the Evangelical Eduean- tional Union of the Reformed church, will preach at Zion on Sunday morn ing at 10.30 o'clock, and at Hublers- burg at 2 o'clock. He will speak on YOhristian Education” in our colleges and inaries, Dr. Wolfinger will preach at Jacksonville in the evening at 7 o'clock. middie- | | but {the | started | went on; | next Was on | he | ia too MOSHANNON., Ira Keller, of North Bend, visiting friends and relatives place, Charles McGowan took a party to Karthaus on Saturday to the Eagle Hotel and after supper all returned home, every one wishing the snow to stay so as to en- joy another such occasion. H. H Fye made a flying Lock Haven last week, How deep is the snow in Posy low? Ask Herman Ray Holt, who has been very ill for the last few weeks, is Improving very slowly: hope for his speedy re- covery. The stormy week has caused much throughout this vicinity Charles Guenot Is feeling very proud over the arrival of a nine-pound boy, The wedding bells rang very quiet on Saturday night for Mr. and Mrs Snap. We extend our best wishes for a happy journey through life Roland Fye has been very the last few days, but is some at this writing. John Hockenberry and Jackson Maves made a flving trip to Peale one day last week where they have found employment, The stork visited our and left a bouncing baby home of Clyde Barger The electric lights are being used in this place now, but they always try and have their coal oil lamps in reach Francis party to Pa. Is in this trip to Hol- weather of the past damage iil for hetter week the town last boy at Tuberty took a Karthaus on Saturday Boys the next time you wish candy and don't have the money to pay for it, don't forget some the other boys will help you out John Walker, who is in the burg hospital, is some better writing sleighing night. of Philips at this STORMSTOWN. Burket spent a few Philipsburg Last week one night young ladies went for a had to stand on the sleigh was full As the girls fell off take better boys last H. C it days veek a couple of our sleigh ride runners as the nd care of t horse the boys hem the time Last Thursday ev from this Blair Wait Mr. and Mr Harr spent Sunday at the | Cronemiller Those nid h ing at pent ening a 1¢ place ‘ Griffin They 10¢ Ray Hunter cream THE CHILD. This might be called the Child age, much more vital than the Stone, Bronze or Iron Ages An old gentleman avers WAS a boy eighty all reverence was given to while now reverence is children, so has gether Special legisiation is being made for the child The hosts of Boy Scouts that marched to Washington were treated with almost the same con- sideration as the army or navy. A command has gone forth that child shall be educated Some complain that being turned finished produc ready to step onto the ladder at the start, so lower rungs will empty ever i128 not | paper to methods of training the on the other hand to ask him While the hildrer taught almost everything are worlds in the heavens they know nothing As & average child's knowledge heavens begins and ends that when YOArs ago old age given to missed it alto- he some 11 asi he he is Die criticise child, it more are ols there of Ww rule of the starry with hich the twinkle little wonder what he world so high a diamond the sk: beautiful winter night were shining 1 pointed walking with me, the the Little Bear and The boy exclaimed, they are? 1 thought just stars” Some parents their children as they planets and call them and the boy most likely turns to the pool table and strike a ball to cool hig injured feelings. The worst fea. ture of the pool table is its being in- doors; any recreation that takes the children into the open alr has a bie advantage Please do not courage them from “hitching wagons to the stars” They come to earth soon enough Again our trees are people by lions of feathery inhabitants that average boy knows as birds, good tar. gets for his sling shot His knowledge of the bird is “Who killed Cock Robin? I. sald the Sparrow, With my bow and arrow I killed Cock Robin” A very scientific tale It is, has not seen the outrageous enmity towards the robing exhibited by the sparrows? The latter will tear down one nest after another built by the Twinkle, How 1 Up above Like One stars boy and star what star you are in when out to a HE the evening “Is that they were ridicule look at the “star gazers" mil for sleighing | night | having | i _.-.rw Agonies of Gout. An English nobleman in a London | elub one evening gave some of his fe low members a pleturesque descrip. tion of the gout, “You le In bed,” he sald, “with the | gouty food stretched out, and you feel as though the sole of It was pressed against the bars of a redhot fire. In the middle of the furnace is a fellow with a gun loaded to the muzzle with redhot needles. Presently he fires the gun at your foot. and you feel the redhot needles travel up your leg and come out nt the knee, not all at once, but like the animals that went into the ark, two by two. When the last cou ple of needles have finished the course vou find yourself sweating with fear and wondering how long it will be be- fore the fellow fires the gun again Presently you find he is under tract to fire it every five minutes, and you get ready for the discharge, you can never be sald to get accustom ed to it. because the blackguard loads It with a new kind of redhot every time and sometimes adds half a dozen redhot corkscrews. That's the gout.” con The Spider and the Bee. A correspondent of Countryside was sitting one day upon an English moor, crouched expectant in its web. Sud denly he saw the spider firmly the web with its feet and shake with all its might After awhile repeated the operation. and reason became apparent. Whenever a it S000 It If a did bee sigual not want this | any warning such visitor out that unwelcome at cut | itself its any creature can intricate than a fis | moreover. that it she the Instinct or reasoning power to put the web In the best and there pa | tiently await its that { the border line aud | reason is far from distinct once of part guest That weave a web herman's net mild possess place prey between sugrests instinct The Word Lady. Connected, no doubt, with the cheap the practical disappearance of the “gentle The distinction between brought in the rules of civility ening of the word “iady” has been woman.” the | two was teenth out seven century which that | not enough to salute her, tlewoman also, if she be then present At the beginning of the nineteenth cen tury “one has marked with at tentive observation the Iate viciss! tudes In kingdoms and governments and, with a precision almost prophetic foretold what would happen” adver. tised in the Times his “give such advice to persons of for | declared but her gen who importance to them.” “When a lady This how- | the | being | the | Bear | the | literary | requires an interview.” sald the ad. meeting."~London Mall AARONSBURG. i Mra. Jacob Winkleblech ire wel guests fon were ileal Warrer Friday Acker f ith resped man BR has gone u here h secured em ‘harles { young { Johnsat ployment Perr to Bellefonte mn WAN, W made a busines Monday and wife days with Adams Stover have Mrs Clvde to spend a few {er's parents Mr. and joicing over The auctic cont Mrs. Harry Acker are their first born; its a girl mn in Mensch's store room ines every afternoon with crowds all the time For Frost Bites and Chapped Skin. For frost bitten ears fingers and { toes; chapped hands and lips, chil- blains, cold sores, red and rough | skins, there is nothing to equal Buck- len's Arnica salve. Stops the pain at once and heals quickly. In every | home there should be a box handy all {the time. Best remedy for all skin | diseases, itching eczema, tatler, plies, lete, 26¢. All druggists or by mail. H. | BE. Bueklen & Co. Philadelphia or St | Louis. ~Adv, Jan. dou- | dis- | their | will | Led Wedding March, Mrs. Mary Horowiiz, of New York, eighty «four years old, at her grand- | daughter's wedding led the wedding march and was followed by forty-four grandchildren and forty-one great. {| grandchildren but | {+ They needle | Who would patronize gout after that? | {to where watching a large heather spider as it | grip | it the | ,. | bee flew near the web the spider gave | happened be to get entangled in the web the spider and so rid | more and, | “in visiting a lady it is { headquarters annou | sued for the i requisition | measures readiness to | guardsmen i by tune as may prove of the very utmost | vertisement, “a gentlewoman will give | “<P { her the every | people | ted who robinsg and finally appropriate the ma. | terials for one of their own I asked a little boy whether he knew the different kinds of birds. He replied, “I know a robin-a, and I knew a sparrow-a and I know a hawk-a!” and that ended his knowledge. Since I put the question to him I notice he is much more observing of the birds and has added quite a few list No«doubt many children become dis- | couraged by their failure to catch the | robin when trying to put salt on the | How many of us have | end of his tail. not spent many a futile hour with the salt in our hands hoping for success, There 18 nothing so discouraging as fallure. In the end we tried to con- vince ourselves that we did not want the robin after all, and gave up all in- terest in birds, A pity! for the birds must certainly have been sent to us to know. Most children with a little encouragement would be glad to know them and would train themselves to learn much by observation; and at the same time would be breathing good, pure, fresh air. Any boys or girls in- terested In crows will have a fine op- portunity of seeing them by walking up to the “pretty turn” between Nit. tany Furnace and Axemann about five o'clock In the evening, when thous ands upon thousands of crows fly like black clouds through the sky and set- | tle for the night on the trees at the turn. Bach one apparently has a twig of Its own for a roost. For The Woman's Club, ANNE HARRIS HOY. to his first | causes rheumatism and gradually weakens even a strong man; your blood must be purified and your general health improved. Scott's Emulsion is a miner's greatest help; it is so medically perfect it promptly increases red, life- sustaining blood corpuscles to drive rheumatic aches and __ pains out of the joints and muscles and upbuild i ! your strength— but it must be Scott's —— — a — Rich Hair Long, thick, heavy hair. Want this kind? Ayer's Hair Vigor promotes growth. Does not color the hair, Ask Your Doctor. {0 Ayer Co ! Mn, VETERANS SHOULD UNITE, Let Spanish-American Veterans Get Busy. Following the War with Spain, many societies were organized among its returnhg soldiers who sought emulate the example of the Army of the Republic and to uate the memories of their or naval services, Soon necessity for united action various or ganizations united in 1904 under the name of the United Spanish War Vel erans, thus froming the ist and onl truly national order of elerans this and the subsequent Insurrec- tion the Philippines have gradually of the other orders Veteran Army of which had numerous tod Grand | perpet military seeing the of war in absorbed most most notably “The the Philippines’ camps in the Is lands It the tion that without eterans, regular is sh War As membership all vice, only.Spani soca admits to distinction as of all bran or volunteer they served, were in t the United ween Apri] 26, 1588, ins LO hes of Service ser regard provided military States without oni aval BOY ind July that they of time het 4, 1802 Thi quently ed representatiy h . 1 or n Rervice al tL. 8. WW. V. as f called are recognized by Unit States Government as the official of the War with Spain, the are fre og both in the Halls of Congress and in he memorial Servic Ariington at | of the Maing in Penna. camps veral thous added nin en atl the burial of the martyrs The U, 8. W. V, ne now Nave 1] ir State and s¢ Naving 50 comrades to months New Uniforms For State Guard. : from national g gard | that woolen service uniforms will the men of organization militia special form being made up for them officers will be requested to nts made at once i forwarded promptly be worn by i= to at the inspection in officers from the regular yrder states that one olive cotton service uniform should be tained by company commanders enlisted man for use during (enera rder need olive drab state The and he the April army drab re-~ for the uniform The annual encampment THAT AWFUL COLD Every eold i» “awful.” You sre in danger from any germ which COTES YOur WAY, Eondon's Catarrhal Jelly kills the germs which nes cumuiate in the thick. etied Dig Ditches wiTn Red Cross Dynamite Costs less than half of shovel method, Ditches 100 ft. to 200 ft. long excavated in an instant, One man can do the work, No re shoveling of dirt necessary. Booklet Free H. J. Mueller, A, BELLEFONTE, P have | res | Woman Is As Old As She Looks No woman wants to Jook old. Many in their effort to look youthful resort to the ‘beauty doetor's” prescriptions, Their mis- take is that they visit the wrong department in the drug store. Beauty depends upon health, Worry, sleepless nights, headaches, pains, disorders, irregu- larities and weaknesses of a distinetly feminine character in a short time bring the dull eye, the “crow’s feet,” the haggard look, drooping shoulders, the faltering step. To retain the appearance of youth you must retain health, Instead of lotions, Ne ol paints, ask your druggist for DR. PIERCE’S Favorite Prescription This famous medicine strikes at the very root of these enemies of your youthful appearance. It makes you not only look young, but feel young, or tablet former send Your druggist cane you in B80 one-cont stamps to Dr. « invalids Motel and Ser. , Buttalo, N.Y. and trial box will be malied you. WALL MAPS We have a few morecalendar Maps for distribution among our friends. We do not send by mail but shall be glad to reserve one if you cannot call now, and will write. . . . . . The First National Bank, Bellefonte, Pennsylvania FITZ-EZY SHOES THE LADIES - THAT - CURE CORNS SOLD ONLY AT we Yeager’s Shoe Store, HIGH STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA When You Telephone, Smile ! The Bell Telephone W. 8. MALLALIEU Bellefonte, Co. of Pa. Local Mgr. Pa. The Centre Democrat $1.50 a year
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers