The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 22, 1906, Image 6

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    S—
RAISED FROM A DEATH.3ED.
afr. Pitts, Once Pronounced Incurable,
Has Doon Well Three Years,
E. E. Pitts, 60 Hathaway St. Skow-
hegan, Me. says: ‘Seven ycs®m ago
my back ached and I was so rea down
that 1 was [ald up
four months, I
sad night sweats
and fainting spells
and dropped to 90
pounds. The urine
passed every few
minutes with sd
tense and
looked ilke Dbiovd.
Dropsy set io and
pe the doctors declded
1 could not live. My wife got me using
Doan's Kidney Plllg, and as they helped
me I took heart, kept on and was cured
so thoroughly that I've been well three
years."
Sold by all dealers. 30 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Bullalo, N. Y.
pain
COSTUME THAT CAUSED
STIR.
and Color.Blindness
to Blame.
many who will
Theodore D. Weld
active abolil-
Carelessness
Equally
There are still
member the late
as one of the
tionists. He was afflicted with color
blindness, and often the fol
lowing incident as one of the unpleas-
ant happenings
Among other
tended lecture
two pairs of 3
one pair blue and the other gre
was a rush order, and the
were finished off after rk and sent
to his residence the same night
His first lecture
gn afternoon meeting, for which he
donned a pair of the new
When he made his appea
platform an
onsnearly every face in
and a murmur of suppressed
was plainly
He looked, so far as he
if there was anything
personal appearance, an
fled that all was well,
ly with his address.
lightened
Bis hostess kindly
wne leg of his trousers
the other green.
He immediately
palr for her ir
found to be
garments
i
old-time,
related
connected therewith
preparations
tour he
trousers
1:8
garmel
was delivered at
trousers
ance or
amused smil
atin
aucioie
before
thao
No One to Take Dog's Place,
A traveler was
borseback !
gion where th
tarfously shiftless
{dated shanty
inguired what
getfing dinner
The head
been absorbed
in front of
he “guessed
table putty
Thus engot
mounted
found the
could
it. Making such
for lack
thought
ment th
» there.
“We
drawled the hb
dog's dead—dled
“The dog!” cried
what hag that g
“Well,” explained
tatively, the a rs
know 'nough ter ¢’'m u
theirselves
'n’ fetch
panion.
once zasin
tor 3
»
»
he
No Privileges for Passholders.
President Cassatt of Pennsyl
vania railroad, who led the way
abolition of the pass system
his own fare when he
gon, Robert Kelso Cassatt, it is
ported, is also setting the riding pub-
lic a good example. An Iingpovation
of kindred cost has been latroduced
on the Reading road, whera paying
passengers must be provided with
seats, even those traveling on passes
should have to stand. Besides, pass.
holders must show their passes every
ride. no matter how well they may be
known to conductors.
tho
ta navins
is pa)
rides
UNDER WHICH KINC
The More Postum ths Moras Foodwihe
More Coffer the More Polson,"
The Pres. of the W. C. T. U. in a
young giant State in the Northwest
AYE:
“1 did not realize that I was a siave
to coffee till ! left off drinking it. For
three or four years I was obliged to
take a nerve tonle every day. Now 1
am free, thanks to Postum Feod Coffee,
“After finding out what coffee will do
to its vietims, I conld hardly stand to
have my husband drink it; but he was
not willing to quit. 1 studied for
mauths to find a way to Induce him to
leave it off. Finally I told him I would
make no more coffee,
“1 got Postum Food Coffer, and made
It strong=boiled it the required time,
and bad him read the little book, ‘The
Road to Wellville,” that comes in every
pkg.
“To-day Postum haz no stronger ad.
voeate than my husband! He tells our
friends how to make it, and that he got
through the winter without a spell of
the grip and has not had a headache
for months-he used to be subject to
frequent nervous headaches,
“Ihe stronger you drink Postum the
mere food you get; the stronger you
drink coffee the more poison you get.”
Name given by Postum Co. Battle
Creek Mich.
There's a reason.
SORGHUM FOR FEED
Not long since I noticed an article
on sorgum In the In.
The article led me tO
discussion
servation on the subject.
As we had 12 head of young
feed this and
hay being fine
After the planted we br
fined
ground,
the
time, and
mules
hearing of
tried it
ke
to winter
we
corn wis
down about one acre,
clay not any too rich
1
only place
as home dealers
Indianapolis at $1.50
11% bushels and sowed on
bought at
with a two horse wheat
was plenty thick,
as it wasn’t
tall
the acre
but
was all right 80 course
It grew about as as a
t
|
fown
I.
of the heads had
through it it blew
in a wind
the majority
that flattened c¢
turn-
ed brown er black we
mower, September 95
blades
let it lay abo a
were
wr
week, the
i with
cured, rake i
dump sulky
woul
curing in
most feed
evel Baw
heaviest
made,
It will
leave
vou feed
mules
afraid
oe i
1 eM
of a trial at
you will
again especially
lined thon
pxcess is
the
stock SCOUTS,
indiana Farm
“HAT DOES WELL
y offer a ration for M
of Ver:
s of Novemb
ere as
wont. who says
= 20 that two
much as
that time make his hens
from
pullets
every
OM pose i of twenily
and fiftveeven
eighty, and the
40 per cent,
1
i
hens
of
averaged
August
trv
still at it. For
three yearling
pulleta, a total
yearling hens
production from
ing period, and
the morning
fed at sunrise, I
ber 1, through the
are
mash, which Is
This swells
lightens
boiling water,
the meal about one-half and
the mash.
to make a good stiff
this 1 stir four quarts
over it
batter
of bran,
One
would
Bowker's
think the
meat scrap
scalded meal not
here lies one great secret
right
it satire more
in troughs,
too moist, because
easily. This is fed
is for eighty hens.
The above makes a fairl
and as his hens are a |
condition, he should feed the meat
food separately, keeping it before
them all the time, giving the first
feed of it after they have had a full
feed of mash or grain, so they will
not overeat of it and produce bowel
trouble. It is conceded that, where
milk is given fowls to drink, less
meat is required, and if fed separ-
ately each hen can eat as much or as
little as she chooses,
It the hens eat the mash raven
ously and clean it up in a few min-
utes, 1 give each thirty fowls a piat
of wheat or cracked corn in the lit.
ter; at noon one pint of wheat and
once quart of cracked corn, and at 3
p. m. one quart of wheat and one
quart of cracked corn, all in the lit
ter for them to scratch out. Exercise
fs healthTul and keeps them from
feather pulling, egg eating, ote.
Of course judgment must be used.
It the bowels are too loose, cut the
mash out for one morning and feed
again in the litter.
Give them the cattle beets at least
every other day, as the green food
will ald materially in warding off dis
easo,
y rich mash,
ittie out of
The above treatment, with no milk,
is «diving me excellent gatisfaction,
and a 40 per cent egg production dur
ing the moulting period speaks well
for the condition of the stock eating
it.
A variety Is but
on a ration and stick to it, and perse
will genarally bring
good time~D. J. Ryther,
Farmer
necessary, gettle
varance
results In
in the Tribune
TREATMENT OF
Young hot which
have just been, broken in
generally shy
and
thoroug!
to
SHYING,
508 are being, or
are very
more or less
apt to
various objects sights until
have become
with road
quently
fer or
Ng
SEARCH FOR OUTLAW'S GOLD.
Treasure Buried
Stolen from Outlaws
ni
ndian Territory.
ied, taoug
ts the
nearly
was
has
country
for the
and as
{treasure
Willow
weeks
been in the
geveral
gold, but no
So much fait!
party
for
searching lost
trace has
has pinned
story, though, another searc
instigated. Tae previous
have been persons entirely 1
with the couatry,
Vinita's young men has
near Willow Springs since childaood
will employed and a thorough
searcn made. ~Vinita Chieftain
been found
been 10 the
Vaud
Was
who lived
oe
But He Swung His Lantern,
Representative J. Sharp
tells a tale of the days when he was
counsel! for a railway line
At one point on its line the com
pany had stationed an old negro
ratchman whose duties consisted in
arning travelers, when a train ap
proached, One night a wagon belong:
ing to a farmer was struck, resulting
in a bad accident The company
was sued for damages and the old
colored man was the principal wit.
ness for his emplogers. Among the
questions was one as to whether he
was sure that he had swung his
lantern across the road when he per
ceived the train approaching. The
negro replied:
“1 shorely did, sah!”
The trial resulted in a verdict for
the company, and Mr. Williams, as
counsel took early occasion to com:
pliment the aged negro oa his excel
lent testimony, to which the latter
replied:
“Thankee, Marse John, but 1 was
sorely skeered when dat lawyer man
begin to ask me about de lantern. I
was afreaed for a minute dat he was
goin' to ask me If it was lit or not.
De ofl done give out some time befo’
de accidont!”—8uccess,
The members of the new British
Cabinet seem to be outdoor men.
i
RISKS TAKEN BY ‘WHITE MEN IN
THE SOLOMON ISLANDS.
The Profits Great, but the Traders in
Constant Danger of Being Killed
and Eaten—A Part of the World
Where Natives Still Practice Can-
nibalism.
The Solomon Islands lle of
New Guinea. The two northern Is
Mands belong to Germany and the oth-
ers to Great Britain
Neither country has done anything
to develop them. Tae interior of the
islands Is almost unknown The
reason is that the natives are ex
tremely hostile, and expioring parties
have never dared to venture far
the coasts,
The traders take their lives in thelr
hands and Mve on the of a
few islands, but rarely out
of aight of the sea. ap-
proach Bougainville, is
land, they see many miles away the
great Kronprinz Range, extending
through the center and rising to 3,000
feet
thiesa
1
east
from
shores
venture
As
the
241D8
largest
seel
no
but though mariners have
mountains ’g
white man has ever visited
because the
for centuries,
the
region between {it
the sea is densely ] tae
most warlike of
Carl Ribbe, a
has had the
Years
coasts.
that
these
He sketches the land,
the and
his Jahre
nibalen
cially
been
nit ¥
Le
populated Ly
SAVARES.
German
courage to spend two
trading
He has jus
with
at
stations
ft Wi
» fat! *“h + +
bristies informa
islands and thelr
vegetable
“Zwel
book,
dangerous
that with the Solo:
traders are
any time
WAFS
Loaded
in thelr belts
II the trade
profitable while
duced to
gather large quantities
and anxious to sell
their commercial insfinct
fr
tracer if
They
fOnE
were
men C
My thew
nye Lele
Aare
them from
they catch his
sell
in COMPaArisos
by other
he whites
teen
The
lous
comm
Shes os
wada lat
profitable to
moat
ical
vessels
of the coc
sun, turning
take away
wa
=
that
aal
-
firearms
ho can pre
¥
%
i "eas A ¥ w : 3
COCoanuls demanageaq
> and thor +b % "y s Fill
Now and then they are Kil
¥ * 3 _ 14
they DAve 8sOi4
traffic
1
i¢ Lrader in Dus
very guns
who peaceably
¥
blacks
iness Jlrs are
jurk around his
darkness in
% {ert Mit
aim While
3 v 4
aope of
the
asieeD
caugnt
find
Now and then they are
ing around the
ition
spy
houses to the
of bed
man sleeps
exact the
the
kelly
Hear
They
white
ar A i
to mark tae oulsi 1¢
which bed stands
ing through it At the especially
beds every night, or else plie around
them a wall of boxes
if a trader smells
the night he is veuy
smoke during
careful
window, for he has learned that it
fs a favorite %rick of the blacks to
create a smudge so that the whites
may be tempted out of doors to see
what ig burning. On such occasions
they are likely to be killed by their
unseen enemies.
It is remarkable that the traders
take their wives and children to these
islands. Not a few white families are
Uving along these coasts. The
women and children lead no easy
lives. for they are engaged most of
the day in spreading cocoanut meat
for drying or helping the men folk
in many other ways. Ribbe says not
a white woman there is surpassed
by the men in pluck and courage.
Every woman carries a revolver,
for the women are as much in danger
as the men, Now and then they are
confronted with situations which re
quire quick thought and action. The
writer gives a number of instances
of the courage with which the women
and even the little girls meet danger.
One day two traders named Mac:
donald, of Munia Island, started on a
business trip along the coasts of Bou-
gainville, leaving their wives and
daughters in the newly bulit cabigs,
which were not yet provided wiwa
doors or windows. A few nights later
a twelveyearold girl was awakened
by smoke blowing through the house.
She thought the natives were up
to mischief, and picking up her ro
volver and awakening her ten-year
old sister, she stole softly to the
doorway. Pushing aside the cloth
that hung before ft, the two girls
dimly saw several black figures
crouched a fow feet from the house
waiting for some of the inmates to
appear. The elder girl fired the re
volver, wounding a black and fright
ening the others away.
Tae Solomon Islanders not only kill
strangers, but also cheerfully eat
them if the opportunity occurs. Most,
but not all of the natives are inveter
ate maneaters.
They go on expeditions for no other
purpose than to victims for
the cooking pot; and as they greatly
prefer to their cannibal
feasts at home, they some te
captives hand and foot to long poles,
which are borne on the shoulders of
the many miles to taelr own
settlements, so that their families and
friends may feast. — New
York Sun
gacure
celebrate
times
victors
ghare the
A TRIUMPH OF ENGINEERING.
Dream of a Road Across Great Salt
Lake at Last Realized,
of the Union
the
little
of Og
Lake
westward to
Pacific
Wh the first survey
Pacific Rallroad came
mouth Weber Canyon, a
southeast of the present
the
its
with
out of
of
den, it found Great
lving
a junction
Even at
of
path
the
ACTOBS
Central
that early
tae possibilities of
of rallroad onstruction
triumphs
seems to engl-
have occurred
y
i
, :
neers of f iis-
or
cussed a perhaps more
»a8ibil-
straight across the
eastern
gave it up. The
:
s most chimerical. There
jocularly seriously, the I
Of course they i
in finance
such a sil
traffic
3 10
War-
NAY
engl
So
come
false economy
ling
squeeze
was
FOR
reachs
for the engineer 0
fn the
terest on investment could |
x ¥
to be told to go ahead
increased to such a point
tion t i
line
nd
lef
’
old
constantly more
vexatious and difficult. Re
Financier agreed
could ove
the result is the “Lu
cin Cutoff,” as it is called, the line
that runs from Ogden straight over
Great Salt Lake, which it crosses on
miles long
f “fill” and
LH ih
over the steep and crooked
was becoming
more
must be had
with engineer as to how it
obtained,
and
a trestle nearly twelve
and on twenty miles
over the desert flats, 102 miles in
all. to Lucin, waere it rejoins the
old road. It is a “cutoff” Indeed.
Forty-three miles in
lopped off, heart-breaking
time in transit saved, and untold
worry and vexation prevented, at the
same time that expenses of operation
are reduced more than
Lucin Cutoff” in the Century.
The Guileless Housemaid,
“It is no wonder to me,” said a mem-
day, “that the fake telephone linemen
and other sneak thieves find Washing.
ton an easy mark. I had a fine ex-
ample of that a few days back. There
had been a family robbed over in
Georgetown on the fake telephone
game, and I was sent over to look In
to the case. The maid met me at
the front door, sald her mistress was
busy at the moment, but would see
me in a little while, Then she walked
off and left me setting in the hall for
twenty minutes. She did not know
me from a basket of walnuts. 1 had
on plain clothes and my badge was
fnside my coat. But sbe took my
word for who I was and left me alone
long enough to have cleaned out the
entire lower floor, if I had been m0
minded. This, too, after the family
had bean robbed.
“Well, whon her mistress came
Juwanigin i told her gently and
y what I thought of
vant. Of course she had to t 1
was right, but It was the first "
her in
|
ATTORNEYS.
D. ¥. FORTREY
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
BELLEFONTE, PA
Office North of Court House,
————————————
YJ. BARRISON WALKER
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
BELLEFONTE, PA
No. 19 W, High Btreet
All profesional business promptly sttended to
B.D. Gerrig Iwo. J. Bowes
C-ETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Esciz Brock
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Buccessors Wo Orvis, Bowen a4 Onvis
Consultation in Engluh and German,
W.D Zeasy
a —— Ee
emer ee Ss sma -
CLEM ENT DALR
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Office HN. W. corner Diamond, two doors from
First Nations] Bank. yw
W G. RUNKLE
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
BELLZFONTE Pa.
All kinds of legal business sitended Lo promplly
Fpecial attention given ww collections. Office,
Boor Crider's Exchange fy.
H B. BFANGLER
ATTORNEY-AT- LAW
BELLEFONTR.FPA.
Practices in ail the courts. Cousullstion i»
English sod German. Offices, Orider's Exchange
Bmuling tee
0d Fort Hote
EDWARD ROYER, Proprietor,
Location : One mile Bouth of Centre Hall
Accommodations fmtclass. Good bar, Partie
wishing to enjoy an evening given special
attention. Meals for such occasions pre
pared on short notice. Always prepared
for the transient trede
RATES : $1.00 PER DAY.
The National Hotel
MILLHEEIM, PA.
1 A. BHAWVER, Prop.
First clam sooommodations for the traveler
Good ble board and dleeping apartments
The choloest liquors at the bar. Stable ao
commodstions for borees is the best 10 be
bad Bas Wand from ail trains on the
Lewisburg and Tyrone Halirosd, st Coburs
§ i i ee ——— a o
LIVERY 2
Special Effort made to
Accommodate Com.
mercial Travelers...
D. A. BOOZER
Centre Hall, Pa. Penn’a R. R
Peo's Vell Banting Gompany
CENTRE HALL, PA
W. B. MINGLE, Cashiq
Receives Deposits . .
Discounts Notes . . .
A
nA
H. G. STRCHI'IEIER,
CENTRE HALLy » . . . . TX
Manufacturer of
and Dealer In
HIGH GRADE ...
MONUMENTAL WORK
in ail kinds of
Marble ao
Granite, Doo" ®t set my priow
*
Safe, Quick, Reliable J cgulator
Philadelphia, Pa,
Bo
Cure
00,
gists or
Pr. LaFraneo,
“LEE'S...
NEW LIFE TEA
CONSTIPATION,
INDIGESTION,
SICK HEADACHE,
SE aT a
John D. Langham, Holley, N.Y.