The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, May 11, 1905, Image 6

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    _—
MES. MINNIE McALLISTER.
ATAAALLALLAVLLLALLALAE BELTS RONNS
Mrs. Carrie King, Darlington, Mo.
writes
“I have suffered for
ness, and kidney and
years with bilious-
hver trouble
and backache and
of jrequent occurs
were increased
headache were
rence,
“How
tles
——— ————————
twelve bot-
FHLB LLBL LHRH LHLHHRHLLBH BV VAWWLL
PAIN IN THE
Quickly Cured by a Short
Course of Pe-ru-na.
RS. MINNIE E. McALLISTER,
from 1217 West 33d street, Minne:
4 wife of Judge McAllister, writes
apolis, Minn., as follows:
“1 sujl'erved for years with a pain
{in the small of my back and right
| side, It interfered often with my
| domestic and social duties and [1
| never supposed that 1 would be cured,
as the doctor's medicine did not seem
to help me any,
“Fortunately a member of our Order ad-
vised me to try Peruna and gave it such
high praise that I decided to try it. Al
though 1 started in with little faith, I felt
80 much better in a week that 1 felt en-
couraged. i
“1 took it faithfully for seven weeks and
i am happy indeed to be able to say that I
{am entirely cured.
“Words fail lo express my grati-
tude. Perfect health once more is
the best thing I could wish for, and
thanks to Peruna, lenjoy that now. ”’
in the back, or on the right side.
often a physician hears this com-
Pain
| How
plaint!
Over and over we hear women say: “I
have a pain in the small of my back. 1
| have a pain in my right side, just below
{ the ribs.”
i These symptoms indicate pelvic or ab-
| dominal catarrh,
| They indicate that the
{ that the
pelvic organs
bowels are not
liver is out of
ge cone
acting properiy-
| \
that the
{ order
| gos ted,
Pelvic catarrh--that is the name for it
Peruna cures pelvic catarrh, when
{all of these symptoms disappear.
The catarrh may be all in the
inal organs, when it would be
called abdominal ecatarrh.
At any rate, it is one of those cases of
internal catarrh which can be reached only
by a course of treatment with Peruna
We have on file thousands of testi
monials similar to the above. It is im
possible here to give our readers more than
2 wr two the number of
| grateful and commendatory letters Dr.
| Hartman is constantly ving in behalf
ous catarrh Peruna
abdom
properly
THOTT EN
SPeCimens
ree
of his fam remedy,
UNION S “> 50
MADE. of poms
W. L.
& 53.920
FOR
MEN.
rior wearing qualities, “hee
cost from S85. 00 to 87,00,
other 83.50 shoe on the market today. W
antees thelr value by stamping his same
Bottom of each shoe. Look for it.
the
BETTER THAN THER MAKES
§ 2
Chay L. 7 y t shaer The Capital Na
3
W.LDOUGLAS $4.00
W. L. 1e 82
Colt 1 richered eit patent
FAST (OLOR EY
Ne a to pet STE . man 3 , ox ny reg
ft ;
Greatest Living
George 8S. Elz the
fs acknowledge
ing painter of
nished a
which are
he has
tenor said of
strikes high C.”
Painter
of Gardens.
re
ever di
villinge to
rought un
Interstate
railroad
have the private car lines |
der the jurisdict of the
Commerce C«
President is authority » Stats
ment that lines are paid m with-
put discrimination, and the question. of |
excessive charges is a matter for the |
shipper to settie with the car lines, so |
dong as there is no law to govern their
rates. Car mileage paying has been de-
‘cided to be as legal as the payment of
rental for property. i
L313
AG
5
niieage,
Princess of Wales as Art Patron.
The most lar visitor to the ar
galleries of London is the Princess of
Wales, who makes a of seeing |
all the proprietary exhibitions as well |
as the “one man” shows !
cess takes a 3
fn these little
as much Yor 1 !
the sake of giving encour
the native is a general
her highness makes purchases of
tercolors for the nt of
own homes and she is a eon
tron of several min
produced for her quite.
of portraits of her own childre
reg
fos db
pons
genuine persc
agement to
rule |
wa
adornme
aturiat
atur
-
W.k. Douglas
aE makes and sells
more Men's
$3.50 shoes
than any other
manufacturer
pr i" in the world.
ALR
eR Lat)
ANY PRICE.
¢
» world
a
p 3 desire
Opossum in Bunch of Bananas.
of bananas appear to be
duci strange
thoug!
like the
wa
Junches
on niways
“Hanoverian —
tg and ousted mem
fauna.
repeatedly been
this way, and some
ittie reptiles have escaped
notice till the fruit was served at des
In a warehouse at Newcastle
on-Tyne a snake about five feet long
recently discovered lying near
bunches of bananas, the infer
ence being that it was imported in
the same crate.
In at least one case a mammal has
been introduced into Britain in this
way. Not long since there was living
in Clifton Zoological Gardens a
murine opossum--about the size of a
mouse-—discovered in the interior of
a bunch of bananas that formed part
of a consignment from Costa Rica.
London Dally Mall.
gort
was
some
the
HAPPY WOMEN.
Mrs. Pare,
wife of C. B.
Pare, a prom
resis
Ky.,
“1 swans
g£0W,
COth-
of
trou-
Besides
a bad back,
I had a great
deal of trou-
ble with the
& are well i
enrealul conalderation. All plants are very fine,
and we send thern to you by mall, postpaid,
a yn.
which were exceedingly variable, some-
times excessive and at other times
seanty. The color was high, and pass
nges were accompanied with a scalding
sensation. Doan's Kidney Pills soon
regulated the kidney secretions, mak-
ing their color normal and banished the
inflammation which caused the seald-
ing sensation. [I ean rest well, my back
is strong and sound and I feel much
better in every way."
For sale by all dealers, price 50 cents
per box. Foster-Milburn Co, Bullalo,
N. X.
—————— ——
A Case of Mistaken Identity,
On the occasion of the great street
parade, during the recent revival ser
vices Inaugurated by Evangelist Daw.
son of London, Eng. In which minis
ters and men of all denominations and
walks in life took part, one enthusi
astic divine, on seeing a man rush
from a brilliantly lighted saioon to
join the ranks, exclaimed to his
equally enthusiastic, but better (pn.
formed friend: “Bee, even the bums
from the saloons come to join us.”
“That a bum?” replied the friend,
“why, that is the president of Andover
Theological Seminary.
The president had been In the
saloon to get recruits.
THE FRENCH
The French mother,
the avthor of The Siu ple Life in the
Cosmopolitan is very different from
the French woman of popular imagi
nation. The daughter of the Puritans
may a frivolous creature,
of the maternal instinct,
chief fault of
France, according
that her
dren, placing her maternal duties be
fore other and greater ones.
The French mother, the article
clares, does much for her
dren, her particularly.
weakens thelr constitution by
much care, and directs their
to such a degree that when
trol is relaxed they find
antirely at She does
rate herself
ing and it
admitted by Ix
time has come for the
its own wings.
It is & part of
falrs, evidently
mother takes first
It is the conventionally
a th
or Lhe
MOTHER,
18 pictured by
be
daughter of
Pastor
too devoted to
the
to
she Is chil
de-
chil
She
{00
BONS
son, not “pa
enough
s0ns,
piace oven
mother to
than her hu
the chief regret of
more
at whose deatht
tood, that she
contrary.
Bven in
that we Hiterally
emotions menti
are
$
med and
timent or which
smooth working of our
This may account
pressions and notions
current for many
passion
for
generations
En
remark, or speech, the speaker
prey to some emotion of what we n
call a bad class,
rated, it is
pent
of its anger
+h very bay
he poOson
s Lives A
elected
ita
~Home
ejects Yyonom
NEW COTTONS.
gilk finish
and
erful flowered
Among the cottons of
there plain, embrol
printed surfaces. Won
thin silk
trous and silky of finish
ful of design; heavier
cottons, checked,
ured, embroidered;
cerized cottons of many weaves
are all shown and in such va
riety and beauty of coloring as is un-
precedented, says the Philadelphia
Telegraph.
A silky cotton, slightly heavier and
firmer than china silk, was in very
small checks of a true Colonial buff
and white, with water dots of white
geatt™® ed over the checked surface,
and another design in the same ma-
terial was in a yellow, a little deeper
than buff, but hardly a tangerine, and
white, being figured In haifinch
checks formed from blocks of smaller
checks in two aizes,
The tartan plaids in a Mghtweight
cotton material of silky finish are
very gay and pretty, and are being
bought up briskly for children’s
frocks, although they by no means
belong of necessity to the children's
province, There are cottons in all
the grenadine weaves, coarse and
fine, figured and plain, some of the
coarse mesh cotton grenadines with
silk finish and printea flower designs
being remarkably effective.
Pique, plain and figured, and softer
in quality than the old pique; linen
of all kinds, ginghams, cheviots--all
of the old favorites are with we in
new beauty. The organdies are ex
quisite in design, and there Is a par
ticularly attractive line of printed
dimities. Certain plaided white cot.
tons, barred off in sheer and heavy
lines and with dainty little flower
are iered
lus
and beaut
mercerized
fig
very heavy mer
cottons, ag
striped, plaid,
these
TH —— I
i : —
Rar
NH
P
the latticed su
new, effective
enough for service,
face, are and heavy
which had such a run 1
Paris last summer, are here this sea
in charming guise.
WOMEN IN BUSINESS
The
gned for the low wages
an the
fow
lack
economic causes
Bl Wom
worker duc
the fact
are
that
to her, the
among
that
oversupply to
80 occupations are
of organization
women wage-earners, the fac
women are seldom “"brot
trade” and
iY
skilled
york
ight
the consequen
than
and
less highly
of
political
men
fluences iy t $1
duencs cusiom public
the
th
The
» PY hry 4
dient «
MOH
m
note
mm
are immens
i
raised
em:
work
trimmed |
flouncings of
with
embroideries
n band
and corre
sponding embroidery
Valenciennes lace soften
Valenclennes for guimpe
Philadelphia Telegraph
touches of
to the out
ine A
nes ang
NO 1.ONGER
ANCE.
gly significant is it that it
it a woman to devise
which the laprobe can
place while driving or
Such, though, is the immu
ly an appli
by rato wom:
an That thousands who have
recourse of the carriage
or sleigh as a means of conveyance,
either for pleasure or business, have
not hitherto thought of such a
ful equipment to hold the laprobe in
place, Is the more to be wondered at
In construction this latest hoon
the driver ls simplicity itself, being
nothing more than an arrangement of
a looped strap and clasps by which
the laprobe is fastened and securely
held in place.
LAPROBES NUIS-
Curion
remas
method by
has ned for
be held In
sleighing
table facet since but recent
cation was filed a Col
the
the
tO ae
use
to
DAINTY LINENS
Even the heavier linens have
their tatlormade look, and are an-
nexing the dainty prettiness of the
dressmaker's mode. A Dresden blue
linen is unobstrumively trimmed in
white, the coat-basque fashioned with
a chemisette front the sleeve taking
only one semblance of a capesleeve,
and fascinating little basques added
below the walstline. The skirt Is
bulit in three tiers. the upper one to
below the knee, a scant circular vo
lant next, and finally a full flounce,
the fullness graded by fanshaped
groups of tucks. The round length in
foliowed, just short enough to dis
play the extremely smart shiny black
kid shoe of novel cut, The parasol is
of the linen with smart ruffles of
white embroidery at the edge.
—
PBurglars in France, a report says,
have formed a trust. This (a the real
robber organization, all other com
binations are counterfeits, the New
York Herald declares.
loa
Investigation of the Packers.
Yery general interest has been mantis
fested in the Government investigation
now In progress iiiie the mode of con-
ducting business by the large packers
lncated in Chicago and elsewhere,
Much has been written upon the al-
leged illegal and imoroper modes of
business procedure connected with the
packing industry; but it seems that so
far no dednite charge of any kind bas
been suftained and no proof of illegal
or inequitable methods has been dis.
closed to the public, While a wave of
severe criticism of ihis great industrial
interest is now passing over the coun-
try it might be well to remember that
the packers have had as yet no oppor-
tupity to make specific denial, the
many Indefinite charges of wrong-do-
ing baving never been formulated so
that a categorical answer could be
made,
The recent report of Commissioner
Garfleld, which embodied the results
of an official Investigation undertaken
by the Department of Commerce and
Labor of the United Stafes, was a vin.
dication of the Western packers, but
this result baving been unexpected at-
tempts In many quarters to discredit it
were made,
no view of the =!‘uation as it now
stands, however, attention may proper-
ly be called to a few facts that owing
to popular clamor are now being ap-
parently overlooked Fair treatment
in this country bas heretofore been ac-
corded to all citizens whose affairs as-
sume prominence in the public eye and
some of the facts that bear upon the
relation of the packers to the com-
merce of the country may at this time
be briefly alluded to It would be
difficult to estimate the benefits gained
by the farmers of the country result.
ing from the « enterprise of
the packers, for benefit
entire
is of
to the farm the
cot
nected
Ev
nerce
with
work no feature
important than
aii
Lore
a
seeking outlets
the surplus products
Our total exports of
ucts have gained
PTE ITE SR pe eR ey pe
5 - a * an :
mobereq
{10 regare
r an deservyis
$ 48 25
LL
port
iy exonerates
scure
\
and ind«
been for some ne past ma sub-
ject of populs
UNCLE “NAT'S” GREAT SECRET.
Did Visiting Minister Little Good to
Find it Cut
Having ulated a considerable
property, the late Nathaniel Whitmore
of Gardiner, Mass, more familiarly
known by people of the Kennebeo val
ley as “Uncle Nat” Whitmore, received
naturally enough, numerous requests
from various organizations to contrib.
ute toward the work in which these
organisations interested. Bel
dom, however, did he respond to the
appeals.
On one occasion the minister of a
certain church in Gardiner approached
him, only to be politely turned away,
as many others before him had been,
on the plea of poverty.
“But, Mr. Whitmore,” the di
vine, “you are reputed to be very rich
What, pray, no chil
dren, do you intend to do with your
money when you die?”
“Uncle Nat” rubbed his long, bony
hands together, and with a sinister
gmile on his face, replied:
“My good sir, that iz a secret 1 have
never confided to anyone, but as you
are a minister of the gospel, and will
presumably, hold inviolable anything I
may say, I'm going to tell you"
The clergyman assured Mr. Whit
more that the secret would be well
kept, whereupon the latter drew close
and, in a tone of the greatest confi
dence, said:
“When 1 die
take my money
behind.”
HEROISM IN EVERYDAY LIFE.
There Displayed in Higher Form Than
on the Battlefield.
Prof. William James of Harvard uni
versity relates that upon a certain
journey he was questioning with him-
self whether or not the higher hero
fem of life was passing out of human
society; and that at the very moment,
he looked from the ear window and
suddenly got sight of a number of
workmen performing some task on the
dizzy ledge of an iron coastruction at
a great height, says Success. This at
once brought to hiz mind a sense of
the everyday bravery of men in every.
day occupations. It flashed upon him
on the instant that the true heroism
of life is found not only on the day
of battle and In desperate adventures,
but also in building every bridge, or
in the ordinary day-by<ay service of
the world, whether of the sallor upon
his deck, the brakeman upon his train,
the lumberman upon his raft, or wher.
ever else men are at work. "As 1
awoke to this unidealized herole life
around me,” he says, "the scales
seemed to fall from my eyes, and a
wave of sympathy greater than 1 had
ever before felt with the common life
of common men began to fill my soul.”
were
said
gince you have
either poing to
me or leave it
I'm
with
we
TE 0 AD AD A ae tr
“
&
|
O00 OO FF ff End bod aay od
————————————————————
DENMUCRATIC CO. COMMITTEE-<1908.
Bellefonte 8. WW, C, Harper
8 HW. Patrick Ghersity
PENNSYLVANIA BRR
Philad. & Erie R. R. Division
and Northern Central Ry.
TEAINE LEAVE MONTANDON, EASTWARD
SA MM -Tmin 64 anbury
irg, arriving st 1 i 11456 mm,
i Wash
ger coach
a for B
Ir
Hs
SF
-
wg
4
Sunday
inmsport and intermediate stations
EWISBURG
ESTWARD
AM
AND TYROX}:
Week Devs
LECAT
RAJ
5
EASTWARD
STATIONS, AM
& Montandon
| ewisburg
of
Shinde
OR 0000 ORO OF Oh SE ed af
OO Shelagh nf af ad Ad FON BE BP
5
RE
——————_
8
PUR BO MN GO a a
WL
| Zerby
Rising Springs
Peun Cave
| Centre Hall
is 5
| Linden Hall
Oak Hall
{ Lemont
| Dale Bummit
3 2 | Plensant Gap
6 b | Axemann
ww 0 | Bellefonte
Additional trains leave Lewisburg for Mon
m., 1.13
m., returning leave Monwmndon
SETLEBREEEEN
BE
BROAD RD NO NE AD BO RD AD
wh
al
Re
Pp mm. and 8.12 p. m,
0 Bundays ginins leave Montandon 9.22 and
01 a.m. and Pom, returning eave Lew
burg 8.25 a. m., 10.08 a m. and “48 1 m A
J. R. WOOD
Pass. Trafic Mgr
General Manag ir
. BOYD, Gerfera! Passe ger Agt
GEO,
Condensed Time Table.
Week Days
Read Down
Nos
Stations
Nos
”
=
xg
ie
on
nEee®
SEAR baer aad aH Dey
06. Duankles.,.
(? _HUBLERSBURG.... 8
Hy Snydertown coo. |
16. Nittany...
19. Huston ..
23. LAMAR...
25 .Clintondale...
20 Krider's Spring..
23 Mackeyville
3%, Cedar Springs.
|. Salona...
MILL HALL...
Swe
»8d
3
SEgresspnnpu®
<o
HENYEERA
_
- On
-
<a
-
ww
8
Penk VRB LH RE RRB IRN
» . : ad
FEsausNppaEesess
en
ag
® ps Pr
—
ER pe
? 0... NEW YORK...
(Via Philad,
P, AM, AM P
0 Winn Ar Now York... Ly... 4 0
3
Da GKPIART,
General Superintendent
ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAILROAD.
B Week Days, .
EASTWARD, WESTWARD
3 5
i
Aft Redo wr PRP BPR POT CPO DOROD
Ba
BE gz 8x
»
BE gg zug
EEEEEEEEES,
2E2SETALSX
ed |
SRELRUREL LEASE
ed a dn pe ERE NO
=
sHSLZEESEER
“FAB BBB BRBERE 3
gsceszEasanosR|
GERD DRDO ON