The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 14, 1895, Image 3

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    MY ROSE.
beach
Left a pure white rose on the shining
sand;
I stooped for the flower that had found
my reach
And sheltered its leaves in my tremb
ling hand.
wide,
Mid the storm and roar of
sea;
The wind and the waves and the ebbing
tide
Had borne it at last to its peace with
me.
the angry
The waves and the rocks and the winds
that passed
Had torn at its heart ere they set it
free,
But a tender hand found the flower at
last,
no storm shall live in its life with
me.
And
The wind and the waves were the storm
of life,
The past that is dead is
And my pure white rose is my precious
wife,
And her joy and peace
me.
the angry sea,
is her love for
San Francisco Town Talk.
fi Unconscious Hero.
BY MRS. M. I. RAYNE.
“No,” Eleanor Landsberg sai he
crushed the cluster of fresh American
beauty roses sh id i l i
with
| hands
somehow to blame.
Morris—j
“Heroes do not
answered Morris H
fect inflectios
its possessor:
love as the mediaeval
to the wars, in these d
“‘Then be a soldier of
daily wars t
plined soldiers.
dler on the silken skirt
belie:
the sweat of th
be idle
Morris H Ime
n
prac 3
“How many ev
Morris?
“‘Few as vet,
is it my
Answer me tha
admit.
almoner?
gate.’
‘“‘Pardon me,”
woman, tearing the he
performance wh
Morris wince —+
with
g200 i th
on you
wasted opportu
in a napkin,
comes”
ole was
time
ent of women, ar
iy progressive in be
of them,
pression y
with
ontact
of the sap and wine
ed to disdain tl
ght into «
linen
just as soci
ome insne and
after the seamy side of life h
hex intolerahl
id shown her
ts rugged attracti
“What would you h me di
myself a hero?” asked Morris
with a gentle patronizing air, as if
and
ive
He
ie had
which in-
mes,
been speaking to a child,
furiated Eleanor.
“+ Do" repeated w
scorn,
that you are a man, and at least capable of
managing your affairs! Life is full
of instruction, but you have never learned
one of lessons. You
been a profitable dreamer.’
She was integse and angry,
he was aroused. He rose
usual dawdling elegance of
said
“You have taught me one
nor, that | shall not forget.
you find your hero he will
truly as I have done
withering
‘do anvthing to show the world
she ith
Own
its have not even
and at last
without his
manner, and
lesson, Elea-
I hope when
Ove vou as
-as I will continue to
do, if you do not forbid me. And now
good-bye. We part friends, do we not
Before she answered him Eleanor rose,
and in so doing dropped the flowers she
had been holding. Morris sprang to pick
them up, when instantly she placed her
small, imperative foot upon them, crush.
ing them to the floor. He looked at her
shocked and wounded
‘You see how hopeless it is that you
should ever understand me,” she said bit.
terly. ‘You bave more consideration for
these bot.house weeds than for the souls of
those around you. You hurt and wound
me by your indifference to vital questions,
but you are sorry for the roses! Good.
bye, Morris!"
*‘No berths left in the sleeper, sir.”
“But I tell you 1 must have a berth I
can't sit up all night,” and Morris Holmes
shivered at the thought of such a hardship.
“A great many good people do, sir,”
said the conductor,
to sit up to-night.”
“But my man telegraphed for a sec-
tion.”
“They were all taken then, sir.”
It was strange that at the first moment
that Morris Holmes started out to become
a hero, and learn the seamy side of life, he
should be reduced to actual suffering like
this. If he had been dressed in his usual
fashionable and elegant traveling attire
the conductor would have suspected that
he had unlimited wealth, and would have
bought ont some less important traveler,
————— i ———— oy —— A ———— SA SA
or sold him a berth already negotiated for,
{ ‘privilege of doing.
Rut Morris Holmes had donned the
| plain dress of the ordinary business man
| and wore a hideous gray ulster that con.
cealed his elegant perscoality, and wes on
[ his way to the mining district where a
{| mine was located of which he was part
owner; not 8 gold mlpe, but one that
{ brought in gold—a bituminous coal mine
| known as the * ‘Little Sumit.”
| Morris had taken little or no notice of
| this branch of his wealth, the management
and details being left agent, but
when he left Eleanor Landsberg on the oc.
casion of her second and final refusal of
his offer of marriage, he suddenly deter.
mined to take a trip to the mining coun.
try and try his hand at heroism, in the
way of improving the
men who worked in underground cham.
bers, a work to him the
hardship and privation. He was
incognito, with the feeling of one who
about to perform a long-neglected duty
The beginning was not auspicion
Morris hated contact with
stranger, and the day car
rendezvous for
him.
‘I would not make a
I certainly am not a good
to himself, and then
Eleanor, and fanci l
troublesome, crying cl
end of the
fidence of the
to his
condition of the
§ 4
embod
the unwash
turned
the night seemed full
were poor and
At the next
{ to cateh a bre
{i & bag of
CAKES
that the t
| with a smile
He talked
their
with relatives becau
| erosity
with the
I'wo
story
to take them al
promise of w
and then they
Morris helj
i Know
M
t and «
his |
yrous stret
mos
bly every man
ai the sie
shaggy old
Wrapped in a8 th
meant
‘ Weel
b ly !
board to streee
ITY ar
man
man,
It was grues
ood, and pe wond
have known,
thoughts,
A more desolate pl
nmi
hard to
that poured wealth
the * Atle Mi
wotile
owners was conducted by
men, scrubby boys and half
The foreman
course of low
sordid surrroundings It
a blow with him,
izing than blows
peared he was received
was brutalized C a
wages, heavy expenses and
was a word and
or an oath more demoral.
When a stranger
with sulien
ng more than
suspected of wanting the bread out of some
other mouth. Morris was shocked almost
ont of recognition of
A
and
f
suspicious silence, bei half
himself by this un.
expected state of things, for he felt him.
self passively to blame. He could not
lay ihe odium on the shouldefs of his agent,
for be had never asked
concerning the mine, or the moral or
physical welfare of the men. He had
taken the revenue from it as part of his
patrimony, indifferent as to methods He
had been helping to grind women and
children into the dust, that be might loll
in luxury,
1 singie question
bim suffer as he deserved.
** Your hand, friend.” be had said to the
foreman, and noted the ugly scowl. and
determined
man drew back.
‘* "Taint as white as yours; and how do
| surly reply.
{ “Iam here to see what you need, and
| will help you it you will let me,” ans.
wered Morris gently,
‘* A spy of an overseer, like enough,
| The sooner you get out of these quarters,
{ the better for your health. If one of the
bloomin' mine owners sent you here, go
bach an’ tell him "twint safe to come spyin’
roun’. Tell him, too, that we'll give him
un warmer welcome-—hounds that they all
are!”
THe miners, dirty, black and complain.
ing, had gathered around the foreman, and
although they hated him, they were bound
to hirh by a common grudge.
“Tell them to come and get filled with
warm lead we'd heat jt fur the ‘casion,”
said a burly miner known as “Old Geor.
die.”
© “They dase'nt come nigh their own
propurty,” said another, ‘‘they're white.
der to blow 'em to thunder!”
‘Go back to your master and tell him
what his lovin’ workmen says,” said the
foreman contemptuously, ‘an’ get a pho-
tygraft of of the hungry children
and dvin’ mothers, for the family album,
My missus will give you hers.”
“Men,” said the stranger, unbuttoning
his heavy ulster, and throwing it open,
‘have you ever heard of Morris Holme s'?
A groan and a series of yells saluted
Lim.
some
‘‘Aye, an’ of his father afore him. It's
that he might lie soft and eat fine food,
that we gets lost in the choke an’ damp.
If he you, go back an’ tell him to
come out here himself. We hev a long
an’ the figgers is wait.
in.” It was “‘Old Geordie” who spoke.
“I am Morris Holmes !”
Now if there is any quality that the
h and lawless of recognize,
courage, and after the
which in that sodden
dra
sent
account to settle,
y y
rouy
creation
and admire, it is
firgt start of surprise,
tie, tue men
wenkling of
them, and
from their
crowd was genuine and
felt an instant re
wenith, who wi
something il broke
Lioarse
4 am here to right wrongs.” con.
d Morris ir
wmander
sounded like
dd, *‘but 1 de-
nds,
Lint
# con
nand
1 your
Wives and
mam
children
followed,
meant Her eves
fo wkneved
t closed
Hes na
ever ave her
Is where he
She hal found
He ha
we him.
shield.
Fireproof Paint.
A fire.resisting 1s t for woodwork
n New York.
wiasess rather remarkable
Compose i of
as
which
prop.
phosph ate of
with
recently been tested
“seems to }
erties. Jt is
ammonia and sulphate of
of
Fhis « yn pond is inje
ammonia,
a variable amount
ihm.
into the wood hy a
similar
Creosoling process
anhydrot
of eal
vacuum process ap-
in general principles w
by which wood is
preserve The solution is
also used in the manufacture of paint and
as a laundry compound, the Waldorf
hotel employing it in the latter form to
make fire proof the lace curtains of that
Some tes!s made
in August were carried out by building
in a vacant lot two inclosed stairways,
one of treated and the other of untreated
wool. The stairways and the surround.
ing walls formed little buildings twelve
feet high and 6x9 feet in plan. Each
building had a closed during the
trials, but no windows. The sides and
floors were pine boards nailed to studding
The stairways were of
parently
Lhe
| against decay
door,
which, for one of
with the fire.
resisting compound. Shavings and loose
boards were placed below the foot of each
covered with matting,
ns were the stairways, On lighting the
shavings the building of untreated wood
burst into fiames,
the kindlings. After twenty minutes only
while mm the second merely the part of
the stairs directly over the kindlings had
gone. The treated wood did not seem to
burn, but rather to char, and the newel
post, on being split, was found to be in.
Jured to a depth of but half an inch.
Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson, an aged
and pious lady, who lived in a mile or
two of Benevolence, Ga. isdead. She
was known by repufation through-
out the country, was in good circum-
stances and dearly loved, but she was
raised near where she died, and in all
her life never left the them,
3
REMEDIAL FOODS.
Eat That Are Helpful
in Sickness.
This list of food remedies compiled by
the Housekeeper is well worth considera-
tion and preservation for reference
Celery is invaluable as a food for those
suffering from any form of rheumatism;
for of the nerves and nervous
dyspepsia,
Lettuce is useful to those suffering from
Things We
diseases
msomnia,
Water cress is a remedy for scurvy.
Peanuts for they are es.
pecially recommended for corpulent dia
Peanuts are made into a whole.
putritious soup, browned
us coffee, are eaten ¢
indigestion
betes,
some ad are
and
simply baked, or are prepare
us salted almonds.
»ait to check bleed
a8 a npervine and
blooded
wiler
invalids
iseful fo
pepsia, liver complaint,
Unions are almost
No medicine 1
known
of
MONKEYS INDICTED.
Strange Proceeding in a Calcutta |
Law Court.
ha ‘ i of
enares
mkevs
diciment ir iATCeny
Neven men
thana, ¢ mrt
walked into the Jorabagan
f General Sessions of Cal.
demanded a warrant
ree
Cus, gravely
monkeys, names
of “theft and
complainants set
. charge
causing mischief The
forth that
the greatest
whole City of Palaces
mises, purloined food,
and done
by destroving what they could not
An English magistrate in India enjovs |
considerable latitude, but the magistrate |
was forced to refuse the warrant to arrest
monkeys. He advised the complainants
to destroy the troublesome animals. But
this suggestion they could not, by reason
of religious scruples, adopt. All animal
life is sacred to the Hindoos, and monkeys
enjoy a special exemption from harm
Indeed, they are sacred, as the famous
Monkey Temple at Benares and other
similar buildings in India testify
The English magistrate compromised
by snggesting a modified indictmen:
against the monkeys for burglary of the
worst type. and the local courts at present
have this proceeding under consideration
The offending ( aleutta monkeys must
be degenerate offspring of the famous
Hounnman, the prehistoric monkey of
India. and head of the Entillus family of
Simians, :
Hounaman was a great monkey, ile
had an infant son, who. inheriting some
of the paternal ambition, mistook the
rising sun for an orange and grabbed at
it. He burned his fingers, and in revenge
his papa seized the chariot of the Son of
Day. India, who beheld this outrage,
launched a thunderbolt at the old man.
and laid him fiat.
Thereupon arose a feud between the
monkey family and the Hindoos, which
is not wholly appeased to this day. Every
year the inhabitants of certain vill lay
out in the principal street a store of grain,
and the Entillns family march in and help
themselves, This postpones the feud.
if the villages neglect the offering the
monkeys invade the fields and destroy the
offending monkeys were
and robbers in the
They liad broken
ing and
damage
eat
{
1
thie i
3
thieves
into hi
bric.a.brac, even more
growmg grain,
DEATH OF EUGENE FIELD,
The Poet Buddenly Expires in His Bed—A Clot
on the Heart.
Eugenes Field, the poet and journalist, died
in his bed, about 5 A. M,,
Buena Park, a suburb of Chicago,
For some days air. Field had
suffering from
and
Dr. Frank Rielly, who
the death to
’
formation of a clot
at his home in
been ailing,
i
but it was supposed he was
his usual stomach troubles serious
turn was antdcinated,
no
was summoned, pronounced
have }
that
canceling an
eld was feeling so {ll
he telegraphed ity
engagement whi made to read
hatting with
the
wine
there, he sat until 8 late hour
Mr, Geo, H
Hiustrated News, , Yen
Milwaukee
wis 1
have a Kausas City, an
had come om Milwaukes for that
i and
FOR
ROOFS
MARKETS.
BALTIMORE
GRAIN, ETO
FLOUR—Balto, Best Pat.8
High Grade Exira
WHEAT-N-
wUKN--Ng.
OATS—8outhern & Penn.
RYE-—No. 2
i to Prine ...coonss
STRAW —Eye in oar ids..
Uat Blocks, ...
CAXNED
TOMA TOES-Stnd. No, 3.8
No. 2
GOOD,
]
SOOORAS. ...oononsis
{ ORN—Dry FPack....
Moist
POTATORS & YEGETABL
POTATOES—Burbanks..$
UNIONS
FROVISIONSA,
HOGEPRODUCTS-shlde. $
Ciear ribsides. .......
oT RR ee
Mess Pork, per bar.....
ARD—Crude......coovee
Bestrefined. .coooovv vine
BUTTER.
BUTTER-—Fine Crmy..$ 28
Under fine saannass 19
Creamery Holls....cees 17
CHEESE
CHEESE--N.Y. Fancy...$
N.Y.fntn.........
Skim Choose. .....
HH 38
cess. NiBZ
KGOS,
EGGE—Btate...ccovvvnend 17
North Caroline. ...eeu.. 14
@s
LIVE POULTRY.
CHICKENS-—Hens,......8
Ducks, por B..csioviven
Turkeys, perib,.... Wy
@s
TORACCO,
TOBACCO—M4, Infer's.8 13% @8 2%
Sound common. ........ 300 400
Middlng.. .ocooveeenue. 800 HE
FoOOY cesses cnssssensns 1000 1200
LIVE STOCK.
BEEF Best Booves......8 475
SHEEP. ..covtiievisisine 180
Hogs 425
FURS AND SKINS,
MUSEKRAT.....coneo0sussf
RaooooB eee ssssessaeine
Red Pox.ooussseciscenns
Bkunk Black........cu.
Opossum. ooo.
MINK. sesresssisnsrinien
CRIBE + sovsrirvssssnressrimn ia
@%500
2 50
440
srassnnan
ee
FEW YORK.
————
FLOUR--Bouthern......8 810 @¢ ¢
WHEAT—No. 8 Red...... 70 0
RYE-—Westorn.........ou. ow
CORNE—No. 2... ccomvinmine 381g
OATB-No. 8......ninvm ir vem 25
BUTI ER-Btate........ccccnn
EGGH-State.....c...cnimm
CHEESE-State........... vin
PHILADELPHIA.
FLOUR~Southern.......$380 & § «00
WHEAT-No. 2 Red “h
SO No, verns chnnnn 24%
BUTTER—State... conn 93
EGGB—Ponns. ft.....con 20
Sb AAI 1.5 MN.
It is stated in London that Mrs, Besant has
cancelled her passage, forfeiting half her fare
to India in order to defend the Theosophioal
Soclety from the imputation thrown upon
by Mr, Burrows,
Freee 6
A NEW INVALID'S CHAIR.
For Comfortably Moving a Patient in
an Upright Position.
The device here illustrated is one of
the best chairs for invalids yet Invent.
ed. One of its greatest merits is its
simplicity, with no complicated parts
to be adjusted, and no Hkelihood of its
getting out of order,
As may be seen in the
Words Ve
ty. fe
rified.
ors
Hruisers,
in the worid m
erinit
T
I'he
fi-
than
re aptly
mportant
’
int
point
i= with regard to
they give take,
Te
foot.
the
we
Oil
great
od the
It
aired,
hey will
t
In Olden Times
People riance of per.
anently were satisfied
with 1
ore 5
ently
formed §
axaiives,
wi injure tae
Eysiem
nguid
“Our little Katherine } ough,
fay to
i soarcely
after which she lingered axiong from
lay, poor, weak, languid, S uke
sat anything. Her
ft and sallow,
at
AUS WES §
i gave her
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
snd she soon began (0 crave something to
eat. She steadily improved, and today is in
full good health Her flesh is solid, her
cheeks rosy, appetite good and her sloop
refreshing.” Mae. M. A, Cook, 34 Fulton St.
Peabody, Mass, Get only Hoon's,
are tasteless, mild, effec.
tive. All druggists. Be,
Try
Them All,
Every
Tom,
Dick
and Harry's
Buckwheat.
THEN
TRY