The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 29, 1907, Image 6

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    WEDDING.
appropri-
wed
COTTON
Party”
for a
the guests are ask-
The
is an
AY
; ty
ate entertainment
WO
cotion
which all
cotton
ton fro¢ and
Both sexes affect can-
wd co gloves,
invitat} cotton
cut
ding to
ed to come in costumes,
girls ar cot ks
summer swits,
58 SH0e8
The
can be writien on
otton
hed
ms party
SQUAre
a yard of whito
has heen tal
ops
cotton
tissue
wira
scene cl he
in
the year
accessible,
duced
usin
}
¥
A
gnrink-
mantel-
cotton,
g oul
ver 1st ne
led with
piece, bookcase or herever oppor-
tunity offers
Cotton millinery
in keeping and
other
any
are strict-
in
cut
flowers
cotton goods
color can be
tata ribbon to be used as bows,
or streamers.
an
nap-
have
and
should
cloth
The supper table
ymistakably cotton
to match
cotton in pale pink, blue or
to accord with the color of the
placed
candlesticks,
Candles
How
of the decoratic are
tha base of the
and «
shades
nterpiece
» calico the centerpieca
“aA to) th
4 take a
ficial flower
; and
¢ shape of a reai or
arranged in a pic
yonnet which
ch
hem
wo
gentlemen
the
while
says on the
the inform
and
he hos
puld take the
Prizes
form of cre photograph
embroidered
and
frames and
magazine covers, laun
vf lowered chintz
boxes covered with bright cal
distributing
cake” souvenir
bags
sewing re
Make
thea 1
sual “wed
Buffalo Cour-
jen for
ding
ier
RAI
TTR
i RES
ENAMEL
POR
As 5
At the Bo
London correspond
rr. "
Whipple's
the forn
though
Gall
lucent col
GAria
bine to
which can,
cheaply, an
popularity
Colonel
which line
very freshly;
A precision
detail wh
He i
nres
Tis
general
sketches of
partic
In there
‘Ble Mrs
Johnstone, of which the paintings of
her husband daughter
bes! She has copied
onghs with | 10C0ss
ir
larly racteri
the
oil
are forel
Hamilton
amo
i room
portraits
are the
some Gainsbhor-
Corres
is showil
pen-and-ink car-
ent
a mixed coli
fcatureas wash
of scenes ia the Boer
IER TO
That fiendish practice
type of male idiot, throwing
tighted matches and burning cigaret!
stumps in and other pub
ile places id with danger f
women fn summer. A woman's light
summer dress and a smouldering cig-
aretta are as bad a combination as a
lace curtain and a lighted gas jet. As
women are always, the nature
of their garments, more likely than
men to catch fire, they cught to have
firraly what to
do in After one's
it ime dor mak:
ing tp one nd w do
The tr 05 is to lle down and
roll. | all very sersam
for help, but that can b
taneousiy with the rolling. If a wrap
is handy, that is a great heip, but
it is madness to rush about looking
for aid. The motion fans the flames,
and when the person fs in an upright
position it takes only a moment for
them to reaclt the face
ence between the horizontal and
perpendicular in such a case fs dem-
onstrated by lighting two matches and
holding them in the two positions.
The perpendicular match is
while the other is smouldering. New
York Tribune,
ne
war
DRESSES
of a
DA
cortaln
away
treat Cars
fraugat or
by
fixed in their minds
that Cmerzenc
bad
nat to
. 3 y fa
frill 3 ng § 4
to
y done simul
well
————————
PENALTY FOR BEING LATE.
Because of the growing tendency
cerratn class of the community
theatres late, interest
started
of a
London playhouse whereby
the auditorium
of. it
the
are excluded from un-
first
for it was
theatre
ac
rule in
several
a new reform,
New York for
The principal offenders
glides of the water, it is
admit, women.
have heen
ons
VOAars,
both neces
Unfeel
inti
of
sary to are
known to
arrival
{to a
Othe
intricacies
have
ing persons
that
fenders
their
the late af the
to
who
of the
alleged that it
an inherent
Those whose attention
due desire
costumes.
the
wag
think
know fem
mind,
entirely
inine
due to desire
procrastinate
was di the late comers did
not care a rap for the cause. It has
been the wo
stracted by
observed, however, that
men who at the Lon
house growing fewer
arrive play-
and
promptness to a desire on their part
One ribes their
dinners where the conversation
excuse to
late are
fewer ghserver asd
to use the new rules as an
has reached the point of stupidity —
WIVES WHO NEVER SPEAK.
The Corean woman who speaks or
even on wedding day ime
mediately becomes object of ridl
cule and Neither threat
nor prayer must for the
whole household is the alert
to catch a single gylable,
Her period of silence often lasts for
a week or more, and when complete
silence is she her
for most
aixty
Pennsylvania undertook
of £30 to i
month of he
not
nods her
an
loses caste
move her,
ever
on
muttered
only
necess
years ago
broken uses
tongue the
Some
remain
oeing
to return late
the real f her silenc
Dupont
of
named
erly on
wife vow
Brunn wi whose husband
hiding from
5 - _— wt “ gx 7
inadvertently betrayed
was it the authorities,
his where
As a
ceived a
did
this misfortune
that she
end
abouts to a police spy resull,
and
So
the man was iaken rec
term isonment much
to heart
ht about hy her gossip,
remain mute to the
Tit-Bits.
resolved to
of her life
LIGHTHOUSE KEEPER FOR
YEARS
hWrane
through
Ida 1!
red sho
: ne
jewn
the Grace
ohserved
sine
ed wer goldiers
Mina lewis
President
and Adm
Adam
Grant
ral Dewey
from
vigited
anle
igh : r the
Iime Rock Li
purpose of seeing it heroi keeper
kinds
¢r for her
Medals and trophies of all have
} deads of
1
Lew ig a native of
soventy-five
years of age. —~Newport dispatch to the
Boston Transcript
WASP
PATTI AND THE
One of Mr
yal
amusing
on about
Santley's me
experiences occurred at Bre«
four ago. when he assisted
Mme. Patti in giving a concert in ad
of the local hospital. The prima don
na appeared with Mr. Santley in a
The vocalists had just recom:
menced singing, when the baritone
burst out laughing and left the plat
form. His companion almost imme
diately followed, although she
tempted to continue. In response
{oud cheers, Mme, Patti returned and
said “The cause of all this merri
ment is that a wasp has been trying
to pet my mouth and we could
not go on”—Tit-Bits
enars
duet
nt
to
inte
IDEAS OF ECONOMY
A man's idea of economy iz to buy
what he wants when he has the money
and zo without it when money is lack
ing. He does not believe In substi
tutes. His creed is sengible at all
events, Some women have spells of
thrift, or what they regard as such
and during those times they positively
waste money because they look for
for cheapness, Wearing
the first consideration and when that
| is overlooked there is no economy,
| New York Journal
i a —_—————————— A sn
The raliroads of England and Ire
| land are of different gauge,
814 Inches,
i - p—
| BIR DAVID GILL ON THE GREAT
| PROCESSIONS IN SPACE.
They Move in Opposite Directions, He
Says, and Both Streams Are Alike
in Design and Development—The
Story of the Evolution of Suns Be-
ing Made Plain,
Sir David Gill opened the annual
meeting of the British Association
with his presidential address dealing
i entirely with
writes the London correspondent
the New York Sun. While it
probably the most technical and least
popular inaugural to which
the association ever listened it con-
tained matters of interest to laymen,
Sir David announced the confirma-
tion of a of which South
Africa had the first news. He said:
“By patient and long continued la-
bor in the minute sifting of numerical
results the grand discovery has been
made that a great part of space, 80
far have visible knowledge of
it. is occupied by two majestic streams
subjects,
astronomical
of
was
address
discovery
is we
measure-
certain
tions. Accurate, minute
ments have given us some
knowledge as to the distances of the
stars within a certain limited portion
of space, and in the cryptograms of
thelr spectra has been deciphered the
amazing truth that the stars of both
streams are alike in design, alike in
chemical constitution and alike in
process of development.
“Whence come
streams matter out of which has
been evolved these stars that now
move through space in such majestic
procession? The hundreds of millions
of stars that comprise these streams
they
of
have the two vast
of
the sole ponderable occu-
However may
which they belong,
a speck In
not be but
millions of such systems that
the infinite?
‘Canst u by searching find
it the Al
—ATe
pants
be the
that
ilimitable
one of
pervade
know.
out God?
gpace? vast
svetem to
system itself
apace.
do not
thou
mighty unto perfection?’
to the revelation of the
spectroscope that many of the nebulae
of lum:
teferring
inchoate
David
merely
inous gas, Sir
hy has ac
at snch nebulae
h stars
he
sg of
pon evidence
show tt
and are
| The different type
spectra form
and gradual
that we have before us
been
ing evoly
star uch a
complete
uggest
in the
oom
sequence as
written
of these
of
nchoate
sun,
i
downward
spectra, a
of
to
cryptograms
story the evolution suns
nebulae onward the
active like our own, and
to the almost
has existed
tO
had
short, even our
ents hegun the work, to afford
observational
ar. but
3
be doubt
sat when the
sstrial spectra un
ty dd « ¢
¢ tHitioneg of
regard also to the si]
themselves
TT
ane
Te
of which
innot our lab
en, an » of magnituds
which proportion f
ta ia less than tha
ocean The
aa a 1
g4 has to thank
astronomer
for the founda
the
goe it
and chemist
his
we
science, but time
almost
'
will
coming can now
when
doht
the astronomer repay
by wide
the fundamenta
science
Other points that Sir Davi
to very of chemicas
1 brought
gtatement that
material avaliable it
that the sun's
wns hetween eighteen
included a even
out
with the s=zcant
now
actual
and twenty kilometers a second
Sir David appealed to the public
and the Government for funds to en
geematd certain
velocity
so that the
that ean be
Cairo to be completed
largest arc of meridian
He also appealed for the
of a huge reflecting telescope of di
similar to those of the
He enthusiastically welcomed the
proposal of the Carmegie Institute to
egtablish a meridian observatory in
task vndertoken by such an chaerva
tory. by the Cape conservatory and,
| if possible, by another in the Southern
| hemisphere and by three observa
{ torie¢ in the Northern Hemisphere
! would be regarded by astronomers of
| the future as the most valuable con-
tribution that could be made to as
tronomy at the present day.
Taken in conjunction with the as
| trographic survey of the heavens, now
ao far advanced, it was an opportun.
{ ity that if lost could never be made
| good. It was a work that would grow
| in value vearly and one that would
| ever be remembered with gratitude
by the astronomers of the future.
-
Young street merchants are notice
ably increasing in numbers in New
York City. Their principal stock in
trade is collar buttons and shoe laces,
COMMON HOUSE SNAKES.
They Have Interesting Ways and May
Be Trained for Pets.
itting
front of
when, to
house
wriggled
snake
house
My grandmother wa
day in her in
old-fashioned cupboard,
very great
fell into her
floor. In some way the
its into the
served, perhaps through
or window, and crawled the
top of the cupboard in search of food.
The first name given to this reptile
was well chosen, for it is found about
houses bulldings fre.
other I re
in the
about
they in-
just to
she re
experience of
Mother would on these oc
casions declare that I let the snake
get on purpose, but who ever
heard of a boy permitting a snake to
escape if he could ?
Ophibolus
{(Boie). is
snake,
ona
an
her
pnalke
the
had
unob
an open door
armchall
surprise, n
lap an to
found way
had to
and other
than any
member when |
country to
the porch of the
variably made thelr es
give mother the shivers as
called grandmother's
long ago.
more
quently snake,
was a boy
veral
but
have seen 8¢
house,
cape,
away
prevent it
triangulus
known as the milk
likely cares
would
but
springhouses,
dollatus
also
although it most
no more for milk the
other thirsty because
it frequents in which
milk is kept, to cateh frogs and sala-
manders which live in these cool
places, the owner of the milk could
not resist the temptation to give it a
new name. Another of its many local
| names is “thunder-and-lightning
| snake.” but I cannot imagine why so
gentle a serpent should be so named.
It is harmless. Recently
I saw a frightened specimen bite a
school girl, but she only laughed. An
uncle mine caught a house
{ snake lying in his store
{ Knowing placed it in
| his remained all
| summer It is that
| the mice De
i sides snake
{ catches
| cockroaches
any
ophidi
perfectly
of ond
shelf
he
where it
on a
its value
corn-crib,
needless to say
disappeared
the house
ela
quickly
and
many
and
beneficial to
rats
erick
mice
grasshoppers,
other | s It
very the
should never be
It varies
| markings
| silvery
{ blotches
| neath i
PF wall y Live 4 "
f Yellows a, Maki 18 & 3
hand
z heg
ibrating
when
but
to
ROme re dig.
turbed it sets its sho tall «
many
Angry It i=
seldom climbs
| old
on
ing up a small
bird's
{| AN other snakes do
expert climber
an
preferr
{roe Pe ing
houses and barns
I knew of one climb
tow fost
about
On one occas!
{ Creed
tree a io a
nest
Those who
ind the
care to handle reptiles
inter
reaches a
house snake an
It sometimes
wv f
four feet gpecimens ordi
however, are leas than three
hed from
in
The voung are hat
From
Nicholas
Nature and Science
METALS WHICH HARDEN STEEL
| Fresh Hunt by the Government for
Special Ores.
Those 2 ys of iron
hardest
which
dition of o
Stats produces
than any other
Bn KY
a sap
matter of consequend
tools,
etonamuahis
teamsnip
of United
Survey, the annual prox
shafts
the
| enine metals in thi
| to $458,327. and
| represents the out]
been In
YOATR, Was
{twenty
a unit In
nly small quan
tities are at present imported into the
United States, as BuroPean markets
utilize practically ail that is produced
in foreign localities, mostly in Pera
and Australia large deposits of
tungsten are found in Australia, and
portion of it to be shipped to the
United States. but for the present this
country will have to look within its
awn hardara for annresa of supply
The fnereased demand for the steel
hardening metals has stimulated pros
pecting for the ores in the United
States. and information concerning
them is eagerly sought. So many in
quiries have reached the United States
Geological Survey that a special in
vesCgation of the subject has been
planned, which has been assigned to
Frank 1. Hess. In the course of this
work, which will extend throughout
| the gnmmer and into the fall, Mr. Hess
will visit South Daknta, Idaho, Colo:
{ rado, Montana, Washington, Oregon,
California, Nevada, Utah and Arizona.
The results of Mr. Hess's work will be
reported in a bulletin on the steel
hardening metal deposits other than
manganese,
Why He Came Then.
Bishop Brewster, of Connecticut, ie
noted for his funny stories, and his
latest is said to be about an old repro
bate who decided to repent and an
nounced to every one that whatever
wrong he had done should be made
right. So a man whom he had cheated
out of a large sum of money went
around at midnight to demand it.
“But what did you come at this
hour for and wake me up? Why not
walt till tomorrow? said the old sin
ner croasly.
“1 came now.” replied the man, “to
| avold the rush '"-Harper's Weekly.
- spurl % ‘
7
DAY'S rLOWING?
cutting a furrow
plowman walks
while he is
that is, without
the
WHA
While
wide, the
11 miles
an acre
the
field and
ity. It is
long
turning a @ ends |i BO
iD A
just
turning
journey from stable to
BAYS
advantages
fields he time
again,
back
one of the
occupied
much
smal
than on vtehes and
fleldls plowing an acre 452
goes 27 1-2 times around, and turns
the
one
cecupled is
headland 55 times It
minute for turning, the time
minutes
one hour’ har
ogee
increa
down
confre
dle and Eas
the
they
Th
ine
are
questic n
the ferti
robbed
fertile through
food or
Crops, or
be plowed un
seed the
early
white
would
Berg
the
mixture of
in
clover,
ndoubtedly
alone With
timothy and June grass
able that nature will
to June grass, some
will help to make a good
spring
aigike
be
red clover
than einer
be mixed
It is prod
the land
assistance
hattar
these may
seen
but
turf sooner
rowing with a spiketooth harrow be
fore the seeding would be most bene
ficial. Immediately
ply a top dressing barn
The manure thus applied will not only
furnish plant food for the grass that
after seeding ap
of manure
goeding but it will form a mulch to
protect the young plants and will ma-
terially help them to become thorough:
ily establiched If the land is not
limed this may be applial as the top
dressing some during the Fall
preceding the Spring seeding.
time
FARM NOTES.
Different plants reonire different
soll and different soil food for their
growth, Therefore, the crops should
be rotated so that the soll will have
time to recuperate,
Contact with others who have sue
eeoded or failed is always beneficial,
if one has the ability to analyze their
doings and apply thelr methods with
whatever variations are nocessary.
Abont the worst nulsance that one
ean imagine is a scrub bull running
at larze on the highways. The chances
“re he will land In some neighbor's
sasture where he is not wanted,
-
When salting butter add ons table
spoonful of granulated sugar to ten
aroved lavor.
private cus-
galt to the
be some
depend upon
our sales,
our butter to
should try
This
aii
woe
tomers to
of
trouble,
taste may
but, after we
the tastes
HH we mi
| mils
of our patrons for
taste, we
Get mers as
made
¢
quic Kiv
ate aroma of freshly
The fine
made hn
5 1 # - i
sible after it Is
quickly lost
Duck athers sell at 40 cents per
| pound : feathers bring double
the amount
Eggs
not be
| must be t
intended should
They
two.
for hatching
kept over four weeks
urned every day or
It will require seven pounds of skim
| med wilk i
beef for fies
One head is the average
of keeping a fowl a and
the same amount is a fair estimate of
profits.
¥
t
Lo one pound of
ean
equal
orming q
dollar per
Cost Vear,
the
RETIRING AGE OF
It is the
Register and Farmer the
the opinion of
the average
following is
how long
inary conditio
make them
v8 who give
arcont it
accept it
more or less g
JERR
jing the of hens
second vear, and on
he hens that
Soma
certain
them are
given credit
is about
past
nothing to
hring
bring
the of proficiency
game degree
set aside that prejudice
against learning from
and journals, The great
question is not the simple, eas;
was It
man who had not sufficient
brains to embark in and make a suc
of any other occupation or pro
was qualified to follow the
plow. Not so now
Dairving ie a matter of mental in
held
dairy
by
books
many
once used to be
the
When our farmers realize this they
But so long as they believe that
reading and study, or in other words,
intelligence, are not essential to suc
cess in dairving, just so long will they
continue to hold their place in the
ranks of unprogressive men Canad
fan Dairyman.
COW SUCKING PREVENTIVE
A dairvman writes the “Rural New
Yorker” that to prevent a cow from
sucking herself, he (ried a “call
weaner” which fastened in the nose
of the cow like a bull ring--only it
clamped between the nostrils, and
made to open and shut and clamped
the cartilage between the two nostrils,
and there were some five or six spikes
extending out in every direction about
three or four inches tong. That pre
vented the cow from sucking herself
after all other methods had failed.
This will not only prevent a cow from
sucking herself, but will wean a ealf.
ft can be got from almost any good
hardware merchant and is extensively
used In Texas to break calves from
sncking their methers.
It 1s estimated that all the inhabi
tants of the world could stand cum.
§0 square
miles,