CHANGED HIS OPINION. de Guessed Four Times Before He | Altogether delightful authority. On i i ih i | the or ander.” “Quite alive, sir,” sald the butcher. i I the Apparently everybody pres- | artist. nt began to sing it, almost drowning ut the instruments. to my sister. yon could not have paint- “It's easy to see,” remarked one of ed that picture, sir, If you had not eat he guests. “that this is an Irish | my meat, sir.” “Very true, Mr. Sowerby.” known strains of “Die Wacht am | gir.” “Have you, Mr. Sowerby?” ter the musicians i wonderful crayture! “She was, Mr. Sowerby.” tween 'em.” “Ob, Lady Macbeth.” oi country. —~Youth's Com- | oo MALADIES OF METALS. THE COTTON INDUSTRY. :urious Contagious Disease That At- Alexander Hamilton Foresaw Its Im- tacks Tin, Brass and Lead. i portance !n This Country. The alleged contagious diseases of ! jetals is a topic that has been men- | of the oldest among the cottou spin- oned from time to time, but shall be | ning families in northern New Jersey wentioned again because it tends to a long letter from a banker of New romote uniformity in our views of | York addressed to Alexander Hamilton uneral life and other kinds of life when he was secretary of the treasury. nd to discredit the fashion of regard- The banker bad heard that Hamilton ig anything in nature as dead and | purposed to build a cotton mill at Pat- ert. | erson, N. J This project the banker “] am glad you think so.” said the There exists in the archives of ove | ing the American flag. Hood's i | the Zutipien. Jolts and | i Felt many upon the return of weather is due to the i 7 a Conan of the DIosd which Causes hat tired JOeling tnd Togs of appre. as well as boils and other eruptions so common at this season. [tis cured by the great which effects its wonderful cures, not simply because it sarsaparilla, but because bad been | tion for the artist's painting of “Alex- combines the utmost remedial values of ay different it pick, Tush substitute for Hood's Sarsaparilla. If urged to any said to | Ie veer Houde Sa. yu Dy Na fob Nagges “Yes. sir: but as 1 have often said | The Reason It Was Taken From Its Niche In the Capitol. “Where is the bust of Tecumseh that used to be in a niche on the sen- ate side of the capitol? Richard Liv- wal sit. 1 have a fancy for gen's, | JEStOn, 3 student of American bis ' tory, asked recently. “I know that years ago there was a “Yes, sir. Mrs. Siddons, sir, has eat | oo 0 mocumseh was on the pedestal, was wrong," said the guest. | my meat, sir. Never was such a Wom- | .,.3 .o Tecumseh was about the most an for chops. sir! Ah. sir. she Was a | g,5,5u4 Indian chief of our school his- tory books every American boy took more interest in surveying his fea- | “Ab, sir. when she used to act that | (ures than in looking over the faces of voice loose. | there character—but. Lord, such a eminent white men in the big build- “Again | was wrong.” be sald. “This | p,q as | say to my sister—that there | ing. woman, sir. that murders a king be- | and saw Indians enough in paintings 1 walked all over the building “Ah, sir, that's it—Lady Macbeth. 1 | congressman. and he went through a used to get up with the butler behind | guidebook her carriage when she acted. and || tioned the guides. They had not used to see ber looking quite wild and | heard of n Tecumseh bust, and most all the people quite frightened. ‘Aba, | of them asked. ‘What state was the my lady,’ says 1, ‘if it wasn't for my | senator from? meat, though, you wouldn't be able to -no nse. Then we ques- “I was ahout to give it up. Then a somber sort of chap with a silk hat and a red flower in his buttonhole re- leved my anxiety. He explained what 1 had not thought of before, and that was the fact thar Tecumseh was killed in battle wearing the uniform of a British general. He died fight- Why should he be honored with a bust in the cap- tol? “And then I was told that the Te- cumseh bust really had been in the capitol for many years until one day a | wise senator, familiar with the history { of his country. made n protest. That | | sent the Tecumseh bust to the cellar In a lecture before the Societe de | condemned and stated that it was the | OF to some muscam here in town.’ — himie Physique at Paris a professor | opinion of all the merchants in New poke of the fact that tin when ex-| York whom he knew that not in a bun- osed to an temperature below the | dred years would the cotton milling seezing point of mercury shows a | business in the United States employ ind of eruption of pustules in which | 200, 1e metal loses its ordinary shining Hamilton went abead and planned arface, becomes gray and on being the industrial town he named Paterson at with a saw either falls to powder ' ang also planned and financed a com: r breaks up into a bundle of fibers. | pany for developing a water prwer and his affection is capable of being com: for financing corporations thereat. wunicated by contact, for the applica: | gamjiton’s original company, known on of a few grains of the powder 0 | 44 the Society For Useful Manufac- ie surface of a block of perfectly tyres exists to this day at Paterson. »uisd tin brings about its transforma: ppe agent whom Hamilton sent to on in a few days. England to buy cotton mill machine: In another transmittable disease of | _ rss to _pave it Sasi uery n the structure of the metal is chang- down” and placed in small boxes that 1 and becomes crystalline. This dis- | were to be marked “Bibles For the 1se has a special tendency to attack | ~ ints which have been soldered, but Moravians of Pennsylvania.” It was attacks brass and lead as well sis Wo woe NE ee al on , chinery out of the kingdom. Hamil antury Path. were caught trying to ship the cotton mill machinery to Paterson, and they Punished For Looking Healthy. : In the days of the Puritans the stocks © © imprisoned for ten months.—Cot ere not unknown as a penalty forlook- ton. g too healthy. Ruddiness of comples- n was a crime when a gaunt visage as regarded as an outward sign of nctity. Dr. Echard, writing in the 1oUt YO8 XO Years ius uice ttle oes rly eighteenth century. remarks: pickled peppers.’ Chen it was they would scarcely let round faced man go to heaven. If’ » had but a little blood in his cheeks | a A rth Sire s condition was accounted dangerous, | do, why Wout sou learn this ? retty Wd | will assure you a very honest poem?" an of sanguine complexion if he " anced to come nigh an official zealot's | ys. en ware aldo muse might be set in the stocks only | the line you quote is so excessive as to r looking fresh on a frosty morning.” destroy any literary finish that such 'w of the January faces to be seen | \gootitions aids to -netrical composi: a London street, however, would run | tion might lend if used ing- y risk of drawing down this penalty. | \o = yng in the second place. consider London Chronicle. - the impossibility of picking peppers ee —— | which have already been pickled. The tile Murder ao a Fine 0n. thar | Whole thing is beneath the attention of . pposed | intelligent person.” —Boston Trav- ipoleon was directly and indirectly any = sponsible for more deaths than any re te e else of modern times. But that Hunting on Treacherous Soil. dmate must be revised if the state | Snipe shooting on an Irish bog is mt of Miss Southey in “Storm and | 5p; excellent test of a gunners skill nshine In South Africa” is to be gpg enthusiasm. An experienced bog :epted about the great Zulu king | shooter if he finds himself going down Waldo and the Pickled Peppers. “Now. dearie sald the nurse, “I haka, a contemporary of Napoleon, throws himself flat on his side or back | 10 “is believed to have accounted and at the same time throws his gun at that time against the laws of Eng- | land to ship any kind of industrial ma- | “Shan’t!”* answered the Boston child. | | Washington Post. The Bull of Phalaris. t Perillus of Athens is sald by the an- | cient authorities to have invented for | Phalaris. tyrant of Agrigentum, B. C. i 570, a brazen bull which opened on the side to admit victims who were to be roasted to death by the fire which was built underneath. The dying groans of the sufferers closely resem- bled the “roaring of an maddened bull;” hence the name that was given to the invention. It is refreshing to know that later on the populace rose against Phalaris and burned the tyrant in the bull that he had made to be the cause of death to so many others.—New York American. A Roundabout River. The Kentucky river at Jackson is a freak. It runs for five miles or more ton's brother and two of his agents | to advance sixty feet. The circuit of the water forms what is known as the “panhandle” Standing on the back- | bone you can flip a stone into the river on the north side and one into the river .on the south side. five miles below. You are on the north side of the river and on the south side of the river and going up the river and down the viver at the same time.— Winchester News. Her Status. “Are you a friend of the groom's family?" asked the usher at the church wedding. “I think not.” replied the lady ad- dressed, “I'm the mother of the bride.” —-Yonkers Statesman, The story of Tantalus mocked by the food he could not touch, the fountain he could not taste, is the story of every dyspeptic. Life to him must be an end- less fast, a ceaseless mortification of the flesh. Dyspepeia can be cured. It is be- | ing cu | every day by the use of Dr. | of the most complicated character and of | long standing have Jieldeu to this medi- | cine, when evi 0! means had been ! tried in vain, * Medical Discovery” | cures 98 per cent. of all those who give it | a fair and faithful trial. the lives of over a million of his his attendant, general unshod de scl Sh Register $6.00, - to att it, y an | 3 th fi : low creatures.” There still existed “gossoon,” who rarely fails to catch emer el nl be ade fo a candidle the time of Miss Southey's Visit & |. The sensation of being bogged in | = ‘seling iodledas hiwsetf fo dvide.by the dec. 'y old lady who had known the des- | very unpleasant, but if a man throws = Primaries. - : Wud Wd ‘mony vemuiscences of | bisuelf on bis -side or back there ts | SHEEP. SaiDAY | strength enough in the peat to sup- authorized announce - J. rr or ore tre Years or | ingrichy o Huser tpveati wily had “Noblesse Oblige.” Sport.” | cratic voters at the n Mrs. Walford's story of Lord | msfield in her book entitled “Recol- tions of a Scottish Novelist” the top @ of propriety is reached. ‘he noble lord's young nephew, see- | gland. * him annoyed at a railway station t saving uo tat ae | Siu Wheel, Wich Was erected newspapers, ran posthaste and | 3,3 go splendidly is it set that there cured them. Lord Mansfield show- 1s no oscillation, and it has been going no gratitude whatever. ctically ever since its erection Bran” “was off 46" would say, | TT BSNY ever a collect, Edward, that a gentleman qld never hurry himself in public.” Twice Too Much. | “Two heads are better than oue.” quoted the wise guy. Easy Money. ! am working my way through col- | yng after,” replied the simple mug.— 3 Brave girl! How do you earn mon- ” Well, father gives me $10 for every ging lesson 1 don't take."—Louis- Sept. 30th, 1911 TREASURER. WwW, requested to announce that J. Mitchell ningham, of eS Sn So ut brite tobe held y 30th, 1911. * ‘e are that D. | MRTrof Thea eral will pe a comadan: Jar County Treasurer. sul Secon of eral primaries to be held Saturday, 30, 1911.* We are trict Attorney. to the decision of Democratic Bemocals Vier ofthe conn, creed | 30th, 1911. * i Wi t that J. Kennedy | Johnston Ea: wil oe 2 candidate. far Dee | A i ae the Gecie be held Sept. 30th, 1911. | We are that John M. ! Dar wil by aay sioner. to the decision of the 0 be held Sept, 30th, Jory reed candi- | , subject to the | decision of the ratic voters of the county | at ries tobe held on Sat- | Stover, of Penn township, will be a candidate for the . ject lo the Such of maries Sept. 30th, 1911 - | m cratic voters of the county as maries Sept. 30th, 1911. . RECORDER. I hereby announce myself as a candidate for | Recorder, subject to the decision of the ; cratic voters at the primaries to be held 30th, 1911. Epwarp C. McKiNLLy, of Boggs | township.* 6 . We arc authorized to announce that W. Francis , of Bellefonte, is a candidate for the nomi. | nation for Recorder by the Democratic party; subject to the primaries on Sept. 30th, 1911, i We are authorized to announce that D. A. rich, of Walker township, will be a candidate | for Recorder of Centre county, subject to the de- | cision of the Democratic voters of the county, as axbiested at the general primaries to be held Sat- | urday. Sep’. “0th. 1911. REGISTER. We are requested to announce that J. Frank Smith, of Centre Hall, will be a candidate for egister subject to the decision of the Democrat. ic voters of the county as expressed at the polls at | fhe primavies to be held on the 30th day of Sept. AUDITOR. We are authorized to announce that W,. A. Col- lins, of Ferguson township, will be a candidate | for County Auditor, subject to the decision of the | Democratic voters, as expressed at the primaries, | Sept. 30th, 1911. * Patents. TENTS, TRADE MARKS, COPYRIGHTS &c. Anyone sending a sketch and de scription may quickly ascertain our opin- | ion free whether an invention is probable Jatont. able. Communications are strictly confidential. | Handbook on patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. 60 years experience. Pats ents taken th Munn & Co. receive Spetial | Notice without charge in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, a handsome illustrated weekly. Largest circula. | tion of any scientific journal Terms £3 a year; | four months $1. Sold bv all sdealers. ! MUNN & CO., 52-45-1y. 631 Broadway, New York. Branch office. 625 F St.. Washington. D.C. pa cure that is guaranteed if you use RUDY'S PILE SUPPOSITORY. D. Raven Rock, W. Va., writes: uni- img or ALI By 1 have, four no remedy to » gists, and in Bellefonte by C. M anak Travelers Guide. ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNSYLVANIA. Condensed Time Table effective June 17, 1909, | READ DOWN READ UP, —_ en E— STATIONS Nol No5 Nol No 6'No 4 No 2 ——————————— - ans — a. m.|p. m./p.m.|Lve. Ar. p.m. p.m.la. m. 00% 0% NTE. 6105 05, 940 | 715/706 2 (857 452 927 72007 11 2 8 51 4 4719 21 JEN jE R38 1Ban 3 Tf839 4341909 737728 2 83 429/905 740107 3 2 BU 420 @ 720723 3 TER 424/10 00 746738 3 829 4 21/8 57 7 48/7 40! 3 "1826 4 18/18 54 75 744 3 822 414/850 7 56/17 49, 3 "(8 18| 4 09/18 48 | BE SHE sis 3 L ©1806 356836 (N. Y. Central & Hudson River R. R.) | 1140 853... Jersey Shore......... 300 752! 1215 9 0A wags vel 2 11229 11 Bis: | warrorr |i! i% 6% 73 650... PHILADELPHIA | 18 3 13% | sm Schedule to take effect Mondav. lan. 6. 1910 | AR own.) EASTWARD : — STATIONS. (™ 7 Read up. | : ' Not No3 Noi #No2lt Nod Noé | i DI Seraar Bens 6588s e Courier-Journal. her room with guns, pistols, swords PROTHONOTARY. and the lke. Cora—Yes; she AIWAYS | mu of Bellefonte wil be a conden bor. Pre. His Protest. has beeb a great girl for having arms thoncuary of Centre county, subject to the decis- octor—Now, nurse, take the pa- about her + pressed atthe weneral primaries to be held Satur- ts temperature. Patient (feebly) f 289, Sem. Tah, 1900. h, doctor, do leave me something The innocent seldom find an uneasy “== yop pisTRICT ATTORNEY] ‘ny system.—Baltimore American. piflow.—Covwper. |S We are requested to announce that D. Paul "4 ed Fortney of Bellefonte, will be a candidate for Dis- to Sof Belicfonte, will be a candidate | ‘Attorney the decison of | It’s Different at FAUBLES You are always sure of the BEST . Our promises of your money back if you want it protects you against mistakes, either ours or yours, and with much the Largest Assortment in Bellefonte always Priced Honestly The FAUBLE STORES should be Your Clothes Store. TRY US. Faubles
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers