The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 18, 1906, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Changes,
When I was a chiid,
And he was a child,
And he lived over the way—
My mother wouldn't let him come,
When I went out to play.
Yor he chewed gum-——
And he sald “darn”
And “bully” too, and “hook!"™
And mother said you'd hardly find
Such words in Wabster's book.
And though I longe
To play with him,
He seemed to have such fun—
I had to stay inside our yard
With Jack, the Colonel's son.
And now
Have moved
The biggest
And have
-they're rich:
into
house in town,
a gorgeous coat-of-arms-—
A lion and a crown.
But the queerest
About it all,
mother's
For now
rect-
thing
Is theirs,
most cor- |
not
he's
change
she
say's
4nd I must stop
my airs!
Lippincott's Magazine.
rd!
fl
OUT OF
THE FOG
FLTA,
[:5e5ases0sesesese52s 2552525252
The skipper,
back
after
squared
olten
names
OCHRE RON
who
with |
dded.
comment freely,
my varied car
humble posit
bark Arctic
nothing to
rd treated
equal—and
who can i
from a
SO
the
for a
an ond
ate for’
That’
to
and 1
did his
“On
let hi
1 treated
—which
yovage
work
mn
pretiy
was all
used to
wasn t
that n
as
appealingly
was about
he adde
I had
listened
swain on
gee that
me the
of it
lay
a
nothin
to the foot
the poop ove
Halyard was
story, and yet
He
before
rhead
anxious
was ashamed
almanac that |
about
nner
make {it
for
in
most
“Well,” he s¢
the had a
the accordion
too, He
his music.
“But it |
other and one
aft and told him
that a who
tunes for a lot
would never
himself. He
standing here
carpet, with
“If he'd
have
About week after that,
night, I awoke and went on
way of the after companion
the accordion playing
cautiously The man at the whew! |
had the tall of his on me,
“1 went for'ard, as
in my canvas slippers. It was a fine |
night, with the moon clear and full |
and the trade blowing steady, The
old girl was walking along as if a
giant had her on a tow-lhe,
“For'asrd of the men's deck-house
{ found Jack and the accordion, Both
watches were squatting round. The
lookout had his back to his business,
and his eyes and ears on the player,
“l gave the boy a plece of what I
thought was my mind. It was as nas
ty a tonguelashing as you'd want to
forget. At the end of it I told him
I couldn't thrash him because he was
a British seaman. Then | gent the
men hopping, and went back to bed.
“Next Sunday Jack didn't come aft.
Iike a fool, 1 didn't send for him,
S50 we made the round trip without
short. |
weakness
He
fo'castle
boy playing
played it well,
kept the gay with
somehow or!
called him |
told him
to pump |
seamen
galley
quietly,
of
arred on me,
night 1
to quit
was content
common
aft
hoy
of
of the
word
very
get
took the
this
his cap in his
argued, maybe It
better for
on strip
hand
would
been of
both us
late one
deck by |
I heard |
very softly and |
a
eve
qaiet a thief
another word between us,
him when we get ashore, |
say to myeelf.
“Well, Jack got paid
rest of the crew, and
I have seen of him. I
the Banks, fishing with
ter fleet now. About a
mother received a letter
with Boston postmark
velope.”
Halyard stood
his ollskins.
“That's the
said, quietly.
fix
LO
TH
used
off
that's
hear
the
ye
with the
the last
he Is on
Glouces
ago his
from him,
on the en-
ar
a
up and pulled on
Burke,”
tell
he
me
on
story, Mr.
“Please don't
what you think of it. I'm going
deck You had better turn in.”
Just then a seaman knocked on the
door and opened it a crack.
“ieckenin’ up, sir!” he sald. "Bo’-
gan wants to know if he'll out de
fog-horns.”
“Yes,” sald the
his sou'waster well
tg etrings undes
lowed lor,
terth
like the
rough-weat
When I
the
round us,
got
He
his
his chin,
hastened
cabin,
skipper.
down on head,
and
the sal to
off
poop
was being the fo'castle
and
was
poop.
! Make It
lternate!
and alte
to the boa
“That's too much once
i i wt
in two minut y
houted the skipper
replied the boat
lowered 3
pulled her
every ince
ers,
The
thn
Lil€
Grace
ul
ward with ol of
ir
bark
fog
anove
toes to shoul
back
shadow
waves
regularity.
under me,
faces turned upward
high al me, with
on their feet, But they pulled
as clockwork, with Bill Dun
can giving them the stroke,
Suddenly
again,
in
swelled
Now
with
like a
The
dizzy
were
us
the
their
Now they
all their
red, set
were
weight
as
Jove
the accordion sounded
in front.
Bow-oar turned his head.
“Easy, all!” 1 eried.
A crest of gray sank under our cut.
water; and there, in the valley,
a dory
fore the wind.
astern, steering
of board. A
ward, feebly
battered
close
A figure
with a fragment of
second figure sat for
closing and expanding a
accordion!
The story was plain. The dory
mates, fishing from a Banks' schoon-
had been lost, probably for d:
the fog—a common enough
dent there
The dory wallowed to meet
drove along her gunwale, knocking
the plece of deal from the
man’s hands. In
taking to tell it we dragged the weak
and bewildered voyagers Into the
boat, and pulled away from the dory.
It was cleverly done, though 1 have
say it myself,
We pulled back to the ship with
only two oars. The others of the
crew held each a half-conscious fish.
erman, and forced brandy between
their blue lips. We ran under the
lee of the bark and tackled on, fore
and aft, in short order. Then | gave
the men the word, and they went
up the “falls” like monkeys, and
over the alde, Anxious faces stared
down at us under black sou-westers.
er,
Ays
us,
The
the
I hela eo bread Off with an oat.
mvscued fishermen lay between
Aents
Holst
Up we went, clear
and were swung in
I jumped to the deck, and
llided violently with
shomdered me aside
glance, and caught up the
ure of the youth with the
“Jack!” he eried. ‘Jack,
oll daddy!”
made way for him
with his burden.
he turned, We
arm was
away!” I shouted.
of the bulwarks,
eager hands,
in so doing
the
by
skipper.
without a
limp fig-
accordion,
it's
CO
He
your
We
aft
door
the
start
cab
gee
his
as he
At the
could
round
ed
in
that
nak,
“Mr.
mate,”
ets they
“Well,” exc
we rolled
“if
lad’'s
his
and
dory
blank
Burke, see to
sald
want,
you
“It's
po yor
laimed
the
dat
s8lO71
he food
lads!”
the waln,
in
boats
other castaway
the com-
has been
me Tr a
as
don't put
books |
blankets,
ether on de
readin’, may
"J Outh's Companion,
then ve name
Har
NEW LINEN PLANT.
Is More
Abundant Than Flax,
recent
report
CAN CONCRETE BE WATERTIGHT?
Measures Adopted to Make
it So.
iderable
water soak throu
would
ellar walls
rounded
Now,
true, perh:
that were liable
by floods
three
outside
here are facts
have a bearing on the question
enting as the civil
engineers call it, in the first
a concrete which is made rather
likely have finer
through it than concrete that is made
dry. It slowly, but
is equally strong layer
of one kind of concrete covered
with another. The last may be made
a different way from the first, and
if plenty of or used the grain
will be fine
It has also been observed that af
ter a time the pores of concrete will
two or
Ff Ng
O pres
¢ leakage, or,
#eepDage
in passages
sets more
Sometimes a
in
wat is
fine particles carried by the water In
a stream reservoir. Seepage wilt
sometimes diminish, if it does not dis
appear, from this cause after a few
Perhaps it would not be safe
count on that result always, but
would not be unreasonable to ex.
or
it
from the situation existing at first.
Some experiments were recently de.
the object of which was to hasten the
Water, which had evidently
not been treated with chemicals, was
forced through the ooncrete under
steady pressure ‘The author of the
plan, Baldwin Wiseman, fancies that
a part of the solid material is dw
golved and then deposited elsewhere
inside the stone. “The Engineering
Record,” however, regards it “doubt.
ful whether reliance can generally be
placed upofi this procedure. It is so
highly probable as to be practically
certaln that carefal balancing of the
materials, fine grinding of the ce
ment and the most thorough and wet
mixing must be chiefly, if not wholly,
depended upon to produce the ime
permenblg concrete.”
STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA.
Latest News Gleaned From Various |
Parts.
of Pitts
a city
for his
as the
Mayor
burg, is
employee
church is
man who
causes,
dismissal
clerk in
spection,
the office
missed by
W. Guthrie,
opinion that
solicits ald
of graft
George
of the
who
ag guilty
extorts money for other
He said so in citing th
of Charles W. Wallace, 8
the Bureau of Building In
Wallace, who has been
for four years, was dis
Director Frank Ridgeway
at the instigation of Mayor Guthrie
William Darrah. of Nescopeck
whose leg off by a train last
has much the
1088 that
was cut
Over
He
worried so
he is
from the
been ing
George McAfee,
knife, making a
kill him
and will
July,
now nsane ©n-
house where
him
of
(¢
caps 1
have cat for and at-
1 v i i,
tacked lerwick
th a
not 10
sperate at
Over-
to
He was
taken an
ition of the
Port
resorts
the chang
of the ‘'olumbia & De
Railroad summer
Pequa, and
it
1 Price,
: trict
orted f{
of the
apecidents
guarter ending
first month a total
, and fifteen
The
11
ilieries in
of three
tal
of nia
non-fatal a
shipment of t}
the district were
Lincoln
Goodspring, 67.138
three months’
Years
coal £
largest co
n Irooksi de 3.7
101.8
This
shipping rece
Fred Riel
a Professional burglar,
in Carbondale as he
out of the Anthracite
two dress suit
an fons
0% tons
the biggest
rd in
hardson, supposed to he
arrested
walking
Hotel with
packed with
Allan's clothing
was
Was
canes
clothing stolen from
store In Jermyn
Dashed to thelr death the bot-
tom of the 600-foot shaft at. the
Pine Hill Colliery, near Pottaville,
was the fate of Harry Eva and John
Werner, both aged 232 vears and
married, as they coming up
from their work, kept them
nearly a auarter mile under
ground all day. They had quit work
and were riding up on the bucket
at the time When near the top of
the shaft, the “Billy.” which is the
guide for the bucket, wedged fast
in the sides of the shaft The men
rang to be lowered in order to got
loose When the engines responds
ed, the “Billy,” suddenly relapsed,
dropped with such a weight that it
tore the bucket loose from its fast.
ening on the rope. Bucket and
men then dropped into the shaft
clear to the bottom. Both werg kill-
ed instantly by the fall, their bodies
being terribly mangled.
0 {to
were
which
of a
Watchman William McAllister, at
the Wyoming Valley Lumber Yard.
West Pittston, was overpowered by
five masked men. He was bound
head and foot with hay wire, and a
bandana handkerchief stuffed in his
mouth. The burglars took the watch-
man's keys and gained entrance to
the office, blew off the safe door with
nitro glycerine and obtained over
$100 in cash. They escaped, leaving
no clew to their identity. Two hours
later the watchman succeeded In
loosing his shackles and gave the
alarm.
|
Jno. F. Gray & Son
Succdssors y "os
GRANT HOOVER
Control Sixteen of the
Largest Fire and Life
Insurance Companies
in the World. . . ..
THE BEST IS THE
CHEAPEST ,. . . .
No Mutuals
No Amessments
Before insuring r life see
the contract of HE HOME
which in ease of death between
the tenth and twentieth years re-
turns all premiums paid in ad.
dition to the face of the policy.
Money to Loan on Firet
Mortgage
Office in Crider’s Stone Bullding
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Telephone Connection
Tr rrr rrr Yr rrr rrereriddd
9% HN NNN NNN NN
| ARGEST |NSURANCE
Lu eency
IN CENTRE COUNTY
H. E. F E N LON
Agent
Bellefonte, Penn’a.
The Largest and Best
Accident Ins, Companies
Bonds of Every Descrip-~
tion. Plate Glass In-
surance at low rates.
C0 9% % 99% 9% 99ND DDN"
NNN ND NNN 90
50 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
Trappe Manns
Desions
COPYRIGHTS &
evita
receive
‘scini c Ts
MUNN & Co,3¢1ereesmn
PIKE
. 85 ®
i newsdeoalers
New York
AN MAN AND SPU
lam ed his
hon iQ,
¥ ow 4s
fOTEOLLE
was
nore
n,
its tail
Suddenly
of astonishmy
A moment later
face, the
water at
that the fish was
The jack was a
rong, and in
dom it plunged toward the
the lake, draggi
he rose to the sur-
still thrashing the
his foot, and it was seen
the spur.
and very
for free-
bottom of
ng the man feet fore-
most after His weight, however,
much for the fish, and it
made small headway. The fisherman
now to the assistance of their
luckless companion, and one of them
the jack with an oar and
stunned it. The man was pulled into
the boat and the fish dispatched. The
pike
bout
caught on
huge fel
its struggles
low
1
it
was oo
went
in its body, and had
somehow been caught by the gill on
the crane-necked spur.——Forest and
Stream.
—
— — —
GIRL SA FOUR MEN.
On Lake N. H.,
terrific squall, Miss Helen E
eighteen years old, of
Mass, rescued four
abled steam launch
The waves were dashing over the
little craft and she was drifting
rapidly to the shoals when
Joyce, rushing to
cottage, jumped into it and put off.
Just as she pulled her boat under
the lee of the launch the latter
grounded and the waves rolled come«
pletely over it. Taking the four men
aboard Miss Joyce rowed into calmer
water near the shore,
A growing evil reported by Dr.
Aba Sztankay among the Slovaks of
Upper Hungary is the habitual use
of camphor internally. For fourteen
years he has persistenly questioned
buyers of the drug, and he concludes
that at least twenty-five per cent. of
the iarge and increasing amount sold
is used by the camphor-eaters, An |
increase In epilepsy seems to be
result of this Indulgence.
VES
Massebessic,
Joyea,
WWW VDD DD VDDD RV VD
i
i
}
|
ATTORNEYS.
| D. F. YORTNEY
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
BELLEFONTE, PA
Office North of Court House
BE —— st -
—
| W. HARRISON WALKER
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
BELLEFONTE, PA
Ko. 19 W. High Street,
All otemioam) business promptly stondod 1]
TERI
W.D. Zeany
ep. anna Ino J. Bows
CHEITIG, BOWER & ZERBY
ATTORNEYS AT -LAW
EsoLz Brook
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Buccessors 10 Orvis, Bowes & Orvis
Consultation in English and German,
turner
Ee — red
CLEUENT DALE
ATTORNEY AT-LAW
EELLEFONTR, PA.
Office N. W, corner Diamond, two doers from
First National Bank. ire
YAJ G RUNKLE
ad
ATTORKEY AT LAW
BELLEFONTE, PA.
All Kinds of legal business atiended wo prompily
Fpecial atlention given to oollections. Office, 38
8o0r Crider's Exc hasan roe
N B. EPANGLER
ATTORNEY AT LAW
BELLEFORTR. PA
Practices in all the courts. Consultation is
English and German, Office, Crider's Exchange
Buiding iyod
Old Fort Hotel
EDWARD ROYER,
Loostion : One mile Bouth of Centre Hall,
Accommodations first-class. Good ber. Part)
wishing to enjoy en evening given
sttention. Meals for such opcasiond
pared on short notice. Always
for the transient trad
BATES : ° } PER DA.
The Nation! Hotel il
MILLHEIM PA.
L A. BHAWYVER, Prop.
Proprietor
First class socommodstions for the traveler
Good table board and sierping & partments
The oholoest liquors at the bar. Stable aoe
ommodations for horses is (he best 40 by
bad. Bus tosnd from all trains om the
Lewisburg and Tyrons Rallrond, st Coburn
So eer
LIVERY .¢
Special Effort made to
odate Com.
mercial Travelers.
D. A. BOOZER
Centre Hall, Pa. Penna R. R
-—
Pean’s Valley Banking Company
Omit
adisd
CENTRE HALL, PA
/. B. MINGLE, Cashief
Receives Deposits . .
Discounts Notes .
MARBLE neo GRANITE, 2:5
H.d. STRO EIER,
PE™N.
Manufacturer. of
and Dealer In
HIGH GRADE .
MONUMENTAL WORK
In ail kinds of
| Marble AND
| Granite, Don't fall to get my prioss
Bupetior to other remedies sold at h
Cure marantesd, Sucecssfull by over
200,000 Wemen, Pri Cents, drug.
gists of by mail. Tesiisnon als & bookie: free,
Philadelphia, Pa,
h prices.
. Re TR
NEW LIFE TEA
CONSTIPATION,
INDIGESTION,
SICK K HEADACHE,
TT
ro a oi ots KY"