The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 28, 1907, Image 3

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    The LOne Heart.
You are taking her down to the Or
phans’ Home,
This little bit girl, you say;
It is sweet she would look with her
hair a-cur],
And a smile in those eyes of gray
vard where the hearse
out
box,
§ mind the
drove
With the
friend:
there's
for her?
i've a bit, mavbe I
and her one last
So only the Orphans’ Home
might spend.
It is all alone in this house am I,
Bat you the ffowers on
lawn
the tabby-cat
sleep,
And bluebirds
the
soe
And on the porch, a-
that sing at. dawn
1 would love to fashion a gown of
red
For a little bit girl like this:
Would you put your arms round my
neck, wee one,
And give to me, dear, a kiss?
it's warm in my heart is the feel
I have!
You've a look like a child I knew,
To be sure her hair it was black, not
light
And her « eves of
Oh
the violet's blue
But there's something that stirs me a
thought of her—
Blue violets cover her breast—
Yon shall hear the songs that I
to her
When I cuddled her down to rest
Sang
1 kiss a rose to your cheeks of
white,
} will find the
And you'll not
phans’
will
hair
the
curl in
down
your
£0 to
Home
Youth's Companion
REFORMATION
IPS 25252525252525252525d50a00
g
&
And what
Ww it)
oy, Tom
Tom
her on the
leaned «
forefinger
They Can
gereaming
wire,” he said
ght” went te
this
Something
ng inte
udibl
and at the
hare fe st
Carpet,
empts
moment
and
overcoat
fox dps fv
De “ialr i
i On
he took out
and pushed
door
onen
sur enough
there! And all
to rush
cart for shelter
I've got a
inskily, “and if you
you, I'll
hands!”
they
turned
momentary
neq
W-~why, w-—what the dev
ogan, with a little stammer
Sally's courage came back
rush.
Don't make matterg
swearing,” she sad,
“There's a box of matches in
drawer of the writitr desk to
left. Take them out and lght
gas, and then stand perfectly
or I'll shoot you. Really | willl”
The shadowy figure turned and
stooped; a match seratched and flick.
ered, the gas it, and the black shad.
ow against the gray winlow instantly
i
cemed b
avolvet a
don’t do
tell shoot you Hold
Hl
tp
figure
instantly
toward her
startled
went and
with a
worae by
reprovingly
the
your
the
still,
became flesh and blood reality, un
washed, unshaven and illdressed,
against a white background of spot
less window curtains awd clean blinds
He stared at her, bewildered, and
then his startled eyes made a tour of
inspection of the little room, The
things upon the table, the
the carpel, the mantelpiece,
came in for a share of his attention;
and then he turned his gaze to her
and took off his cap, displaying a
clean. brown forehead and fair, curly
hair, so suddenly that Sally certainly
would have fired—if she'd known
how,
Her dark hair
in a tangled heap over her
A white frill at her neck overflowed
the deep reds and yellows of the
dressing gown. In her haste she had
neglected to fasten the girdle, and
her left hand bunched the folds shape-
lessly together at her waist, whilst
from beneath skirts one row of
pink toes peeped at the intruder,
“I'm gorry,” the burglar said.
“There's some mistake"
She cut him short “There 18,” she
sald. “There is! Because you've
managed to ascertain that father is
away you imagined that we
I—were defenseless, and
could rob us safely.”
The hand that held the pistol shook
and twitched with her vehemence, and |
the burglar looked anxiously at the
moving weapon. Then he smiled
again
“Excuse
think you
supper
walls,
and lay
shoulders
was loose,
the
very
you though
you
he said TI
une derstand firearms
very well, do you? You can't fire that
one like that you know.”
S80 he had found her out! Oh,
hadn't she waked up Tom?
“1 understand it quite well
you with it,” she answered
his own
among
me,”
you
why
to shoot
He
on the
revolver noiseless-
the
put
able
things
Th4there said again
me and
ndicated it
are,’
i
now, if
vint that at
thi trizge he
th a dirt forefing
vill kill me d-dead. B-l
wm d-didn’t
And he
he middie of the room and sat
hai
i stride
what
she
And
izhed Salil
upstairs
did she
' he knew
went
bed
ness
r and
was in
(rit
Wi my sister Sall
introduction ac
away b
find
the
Tom, and,
shed.” dodued
waltzing couples to his own
partner,
Sally looked up from her already
half-filled programme into the eyes of
her burglar
“Yeyou look
ly. “I've ventured
warm,” he said polite
to take this dance,
out into the cool?
She took his proffered arm, and he
found her a chair in the deserted hall
way, behind some palms
“1 shall be glad if you will Kindly
explain your extraord behavior
of the night Mr.—Mr.
Wrightley
“Th-that's all right,’ he sald, “I'd
been d<down to the works, The fur
paces were gegoing all night, and it
never does to leave every-every thing
to your men, Y'know. And--and when
1--1 came back 1 found I'd forgotten
i
gO
Bary
before fart,
|
|
{
through the window Only—only 1
made a mistake in the house. Those
those houses in our street are aw-
fully alike, aren't they?”
He delicately accentuated the
“Yes,” she said, somewhat
peased, “But why didn’t you
plain?”
ind another
“our.”
ap-
0x.
vave of shame at the
thought of the old dressingown,
hair, and bare feet reduced her
silence again.
“Y-you wouldn't me. Y-ou
wouldn't,” he said almost
fiantly. “Y-you said you'd shoot
And he laughed outright,
“Well,” she sald at last, “]
tefl if you won't. But, one thing, what
did you mean by saying you ‘a steal
something from our house—when you
went, know? Was that just to
carry out the burglar idea?”
“No,” he replied slowly. “I
it
“What?” she asked
“Can't you guess?’
stammmer was gone
“No,” she sald, wide-eyed.
“No? he asked. “Then [ must tell
While in that room 1 made up
mind that there was one thing in
house that | must have, even
had to steal it—you, your
Tox se
to
know
de-
me.”
let
you
sha'nt
you
meant
And all his
you.
my
your
though 1
self!”
“Oh!
dare
“I dare more than you think, per
haps,” he sald, his lips twitching at
the corners. And Sally, watching the
square set of the stromg jaws, be
lieved it Her eyes fell and lifted
as native impudence came 0
gasped Sally “How-—how
9
you:
i
i
“But-—but suppose it didn’t amount
to stealing exactly?’ she inquired.
“Well,” he sald, “as I'm a burglar,
I must play the part out, 1 suppose?
and steal something
In default of mistletoe
¥
V De
Drake in
else
it could fair
Maurice
described a theft
Answer
King and Soldier.
and
rday the King i
wont in
rast
the Comtesse de
f Elvas, wher
HOOT Car
soldie
Londo:
France's Money.
mes the
3 Russia
vy}
Ole
month al
of these
gland coast
(Carolinas
ind Florida
sf 8
ni at
her
are the most
them a long
reported in
seven
¢ wag
that
fre
was
Tran
carly 50's
sand
irhted thirty<eight times di
t
tho miles in
ghowing that she wa
ting herself in the
pu
avel Boston
arted ocean tr
A Wing Shot.
had been many speakers, the
late, were tired,
and the diners were one by one quiet
There
yeople
I
ing the hall when Mr. Elder was
called upon to respond to a toast
He and looking around the
large hall, remarked that the present
circumstances reminded him of the
story told of a Methodist minister
The reverend gentleman was officiat
ing in a strange parish, and when he
rose to deliver his sermon the con
gregation began stealing out e by
Stopping in his delivery of his
text. he remarked quietly: °*
“Well, 1 have all my life been a
traveling clergyman, but never before
have 1 preached to a traveling con-
grogation!”
Mr Elder's palpable “hit” brought
down the house, and the migration
ceased until the close of his brilliant
remarks — Boston Herald,
———— So"
rose,
“in the future,”
“healns will stand above dollars.”
STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA
Latest News Gleaned From Various
Parts.
fhe recent thaw caused a sige or
earth at the Cambridge slate quarry,
Slatington, carrying four men to the
bottom of the pit. Toblas Wagner,
married, of Satington, was Instantly
killed. James Daniels, Charles
Greenwood and Charles Brobst were
so badly crushed that they were sent
to St. Luke's Hospital, South Beth
lehem
William F. Hennessy, a woodsman
Haven, met a terrible death
near Hyner. Shouldering his Win-
chester rifle, he informed the men
at camp that he was going in search
of foxes. When a short distance
away he fell on the icy ground, the
gun was discharged the contents
entering the temple and shattering
his skull He was 44 years old and
married
Stooping to pick
had dropped from
climbed from his freight engine,
standing on a siding near the main
track of the Pennsylvania Railroad,
Pottsville, Fireman William G. Rich-
ards, aged 24 year stepped right
in the path of the “flyer” between
Pottsville and Schuylkill Haven.
The frantic whistling of the engi-
neer of the fast train bewildered the
unfortunate man, who stood power-
les to move until he was struck
He was Instantly killed
While Michael Kahlor, a cigar
maker, was beating his way to Den
ver on the Reading and Columbia
freight train he fell under the wheels
near Ephrata and had an arm and
leg cut off
William Startzel, a
road freight conductor, was killed
in Shamokin while attempting to
I a coupling He slipped and
the track The train passed
im
up a flag which
his arm as he
Reading Rail-
PLENTY OF PETROLEUM.
English Expert Says Supply Has In-
creased Faster Than Demand.
The enormous
of gasoline since
automobile has led to
whether
peilroisum can
AA
increase in the
the advent of
some spe
the produr
1
oon
Rn H
tion as to
pace
itional den
vorkoy
appes
nittee
and thus
itz
Americ
and
The
crease
cent
incre:
Cone
nia
neo
fields
simpls
minatis
the pric e of coal
At
wgent the whole
troleum
Comes
the crude oll
taining ten or
troleum The
oil with at least
lenm, but, owing
scientific
tim tino
estimating
from
from th
twelve
other
five per
to the in
of
im
ana ers
the
ile
“there is anot
and that is that not only
call the ‘closed fields
per cent. of the
erude oil, but they are the vers
which more and
veloped, whereas the other
falling relatively behind, i
investors prefer to put their mone
into fields which supply fuel ratl
than into fields which chiefly
illuminating oil, as in group 1.’
In reply to a tion as to wheth
er he red that the petroleum
excluded by the specific-gravity stan-
dard which he deplored would
equally good and satisfactory for
with the motor carg now in vogue,
the witness replied: “Yes; both from
a theoretical point of view and from
long and careful tests of a practical
nature, I am in a position to state
that drivers of motor cars are unable
to tell the difference.” The idea that
the lightest oil must necessarily give
the best results dated, he thought,
from the days of the early surface
carburettor, when there was some
ground for the opinion being held.
New York Post.
her point
do what
sixty
Wwe
produce
world's sug
are being more
supj
gus
jues
consid
be
use
Cacs————
Trypsin, the fomoty now on trial
for the cure of cancer, is one of the
secretions of the pancreas, says the
London Globe, It is a powerful fer-
ment. If the whole amount secreted
for digestion were absorbed into the
circulation unchanged, it would di-
gest the body itself and so cause
death. Trypsin dissolves otherwise
insoluble proteids, converting them
into peptones. It is also able to split
up these latter bodies. The use of
trypsin in cancer was first suggested
by Dr. Beard, of Edinburgh. It is
stated that several cases of cancer
have been cured, or much improved,
by injections of trypsin.
Jno. F. Gray & Son
(Cre obvi
Control Sixteen of the
Insurance Companies
in the World. . ...
THE BEST IS THE
CHEAPEST . . . .
No Mutuals
No Assessments
Before insuring r life see
the contract of THE HOME
which in case of death between
the tenth and twentieth years re-
turns all premiums paid in ed-
dition to the face of the policy.
———
Money to Loan on First
Mortgage
in ’,
Office in Crider’s Siohe Poliding
Telephone Connection
3 5545443534044503 350043 3334833484040080003044404
|
f
= |
_—, cater srssssseaaas i
ARGEST |NSUR
Leency
CENTRE COUNTY
RAN
a
B
¢ IN
‘H. E. FENLON
’ Agent
¢ Bellefonte, Penn’a.
Bg
¢
¢
/
:
“The Largest and Best
Accident Ins. Companies
Bonds of Every Descrip-
Plate Glass In-
low rates.
tion.
surance at
«0% NNN HS HOD NN d
50 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
Traoe Marks
Desions
COPYRIGHTS &c.
4 oo
on ther
Patont
Yer sal wu
8 take th
fice, wit Now
Scintiic American,
anti "i Torms, $3 a
Sod by oli new adenlors,
MUNN & Co.2 35 trate, New York |
oh Ofos 035 F 8. Washir*we
f any se
WE PO
PEOPLE AT THE
Men Who Cringe or Yell or Swear, as
the Case May Be.
GAME.
“Some hot
foot
people iffer
games, vet
ribly at
rot Keep
One of my classmates,’
Lynch Williams, in Out
never endure the dread-
Z He
and
the rest of us
Was
ball
them away
Jesse
ing, "could
you
writes
fully glorious opening moment
always t
then kept beseeching
in a moan to tell
urned his face away
low him what
going on, which we never did
“1 . know another
and wi
git near i
man who always
allow anyone
im if he can
and sweater
attention to mything
with
i not
}
Wears a Cal
an nd pays
but footh:
when a thin;
quiet
ms need of
Once
del KE
swear-
ing iy
Bog
upon a time he ras the
best football player of hi t ment
in the whole was 20
longer
gorvices as a coach
MANY Years ag
call his
the gra
lonely debauch of foot
“Most us, however,
talk to, some
inane, obvious things to
Third down!’ when ever)
it, and ‘Going to kick! when fifty
gixty thousand othe:
punter drop back for that pur
“Most e do
pound the
things go way,
change looks with
other way There is one man
class, supposed by some to be
out emotion, who is really da
at football games, he or
hard and wildly
upon 80
he site in nd stand has a
ball emotion
ana
of need some
one to one to
SAY
such as
one
Ha!
or
rpose
specially
when
ox-
go the
back
gOme one
one 10 on
our {0
when they
with-
gerous
od
class, who goes to every game, and
though we always hope to avoid him,
he turns up in our proximity with a
regularity which makes us nudge
each other and say, ‘Of course.’
“He is of the nolsy breed, stirs up
dissensions, gives the umpire advice
before it is requested and lets it be
known to every one within four rows
just how much he bet on the game
and with whom, while we look the
other way and pretend that he has
merely assumed our college colors
for the occasion. There is one ad-
vantage of being near him, however;
he never hesitates to bellow ‘Down
in front!’ to men, women or chi
dren.”
Snowy at St. Petersburg,
If you are not a lover of snow go
to Malta, which is the nearest spot
where you are certain of complote
immunity. If you are fond of it the
suburbs of St. Petersburg will fur-
nigh all you need to ask, for there
you may be sure of it for 176 days
in the year.— London Chronicle,
ATTORNEYS,
D. P. PORTHEY
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Ko. 19 W. High Street.
All i profemianal business promptly attended
B.D. p—
CRITIC, BOWER & ZERBY
ATTORNEYS AT-LAW
EsoLz Broox
BELLEFONTE, PA,
Buccessars 10 Onvis, Bowes & Onvis
Commutation tn English and German.
CLEMENT DALE
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
PRLLEFONTR, PA,
Office N. W. corner Diamond, two doors from
First National Bank. ne
ATTORNEY-ATLAW
BELLEFONTE, Pi
All kinds of legal business sitended to prompity
Special attention given to collsctions. Office, Mf
floor Crider's Rzchangs.
H. B. SPANGLER
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
Practices in «ll the courts. Consultstiom
English and German. Ofios, Crider's Exchangy
Building yh
0d Fort Hotel
EDWARD ROYER, Progeistor.
Location : One mile South of Centre Hall
wishing to enjoy an evening given
attention. Meals for such oocasiond
pared an short notice. Alwem
for the transient trade.
RATES : $1.00 PER DAY.
rem i
The bel Hate |
MILLEEIM, PA
I A. BHAWVER, Prop.
Fist clam socommodations for the wravsies
Good table board and sleeping apartments
The choloest Liquors at the bar. Stable ap
sommodsations for horses is the best So
bad. Bus and from all trains en
Lewisburg and Tyrone Rall road, at Coburg
I —
LIVERY. 2
hai rt made to
ate Com.
relerSeee
D. A. BOOZER
Centre Hall, Pa. Penna RR R
Pears Valley Banking Company
CENTRE HALL, PA
W. B. MINGLE, Cashief
Receives Deposits . .
Discounts Notes .
H. @. STRCHIIEIE
PEMN.
.
Manufacturer of
and Dealer In
MONUMENTAL WORK
in ail kinds of
tn other remedies
Spe
200, Ww aman:
wists or by mail.
LEE" S...
NEW LIFETEA
CONSTIPATION,
INDIGESTION,
SICK HEADACHE,
toha OD. Langham, Holley, N. ¥. ©
4