The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 06, 1908, Image 6

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SPREADS TERROR.
Doy l¢
Nes!
Hahbocol
tient
broker
phys
to sa
Whil
wood
the pil
found ti
AIDS WIDOW AND ORPHANS.
about
tion
In
Schu
gave 1)
they he
The
has
Andre
a new pipe om
The fami!
Flicksville t reo con
gas from a sto t ti r home M
Ruch are t o clo and fell in
faint to + child, an in-
fant, arious way
In ti of Columbia
County the work of lumbering is be-
Ing ¢ i ru ver be
fore enualed conditions are fa
vorahle for gn¢ ve the logs out o
the woods an ! ing are bus
day nig the
the mills at Jamison Clty.
The country home of J
a Read was
pilverware
night offices in one neigh-
borhood were also entered and looted,
The most interesting development
of the recent primary election in
Slatington is the tie vote in the con-
test for councilmanic nomination be-
tween John P. Gordan and R. P.
dutchigon, of the Third Ward.
The reaidents of Sanatoga and
Lower Pottsgrove Townehip have or-
ganized a fire company, with the fol-
lowing officers: President, 8. JI.
Kurtz; vice president, E. Jlarten-
stine: recording secretary, John K.
Bucher; financial secretary, J. M,
Yerger; treasurer, P. Schock.
The theft of a lighted lamp from
the parlor of Nicholas Blanche's
home, in Conshohocken, was the
strange act of a thief for whom the
are seeking, The thief, with
out even turning out the light, boldly
walked out of the house with the
blazing lamp in his hand.
foeely
and logs to
H
robbed
Lvs vel
sa YO
Four coal
»
a 9
A 2
<4
BB
FRUANT SUR!
OST WIFE'S
New Troliey Line
snttavilla | ‘
Pottaviiis ft Ble
tq ¥ vt arn
fiddiepo i Ana
mnecting link, {1
be run from
Chunk, through
rt of the anthracite regions
of the
year
Samuel Graffin, a son
Charles Graflin, for man?
master of Catasauqua, re
of his appointment as postmaster
that place
late
DOS.
vord
ved notice |
at
UDDS AND ENDS.
The annual profit at
amounts to $5,000,000,
The bone frame
Monte Carlo |
of the
45 tons
The human eyes are rarely of equal |
power in the same person !
It is estimated that immigrants re
turning home took out of the United |
fintes last year $110,000,000 !
Washington now has 78 public |
atatnes. New York 76. Boston 36 |
Philadelphia 382 and Chicago about
20
The city of Philadelphia has paid
for a strip of land 1 fuch hy 178 feel
at Broad and Walnut Streets $33.
600.
A fashion article on bridal veils re
lated that a recent bride wore her
face covered on the way to the altar
At Bay City, Mich.. there is a pile |
of sugar beets consisting of 290 tons
worth $47,000. The pile is 700 feel
long and 17 feet high.
average
building and land on Manhattan Is
and from the Hattery to Central
Park are worth $2,900,000,000.
There is one Ameriean book which |
ghonld be counted among the best
gollers. Over 3,000,000 copies have -
heen sold, It is “The Horse Book,
-“"
HOLLIS EH OLD
¥n /VOTESw &
Ho ——t ip 1 a LF
Wd Rs
and bake for half
Meat Rolls Make
powder biscuit dough
one-fourth of inch
Chop and
dough Put of butter, salt
pepper and a
the meat;
oven
and
Of an
beef
bit
sprinkling fiour
roll up and bake in a quick
cold spread on the
anqg
of on
Apple and Beet Hash Chop to
gether 1 cupful and 1
cupful of tart apples moistened a iit
tle with gravy and
brown. in the oven,
of cold beef
or soup stock,
Corn and Oat Muffins —Mix 3 cup
fuls of buttermilk with 1 tablespoan
ful of salt and 1 tablespoonful of
sods. Deat until it foams. Add quick.
ly 2 well-beaten eggs and equal quan
tities of corn meal Md rolled oats un
til a thiek batter is obtained. Pour
into hot muffin rings and bake in »
quick oven,
Chocolate Cookies —One cupful of
sugar, half a cupful of melted butter,
three-fourths of a cupful of sweet
mis, 2 cupfuls of flour, 1 cupful of
raising, 1 cupful of chopped nuts, 1
egg and the yelk of another, Put
halt a teaspoonful of cream of tartar
in the flour and a quarter of a tél.
spoonful of soda In the milk. Melt
4 squares of unsweetened chocolate
and add the last thing. Flavor with
vamilly, Drop on pans and bake in
a moderate oven.
Marke! Reports.
i GQ.
of Trade
More
‘resumed
Dun & Co.'s
BAYS!
Weekly
manufacturing
and mon
but bu
q
Live Stock.
New York —Heoves
No tradi
2.400 guar
at $2
nd Lambs
lambs siow
5 per 100 p
lambs,
Chicago.—Cattie
Rhee '
Sheep sold
yunds; yea
86.506 1.50
Market dull, 1¢
Steers, 4.20@ 6
lower
29560 4.50;
o PE 7 * Yr gn
2854.20; calves
stockers and feeders, 2.60
i 15¢
COWS,
3.25: bulls,
in 7 G0:
§.95
Hogs
Cholce
ay
oO 50@
heifers
3.04
Market
heavy shipping,
butchers, 4.20& 4.30;
$.100 4.15;
packers 3
5&0 10c lower
4.256 4.30
Hight mixed
cholece light, 4.20@ 4.25;
i G0@4.20; pigs, 3.500
§.15: bulk of sales, 4.20 4.30.
Sheep— Market slow, 10@ 16¢
lower Sheep, 6 .26@ 5.40; lambs
5.7561 7.00: yearlings, 5.504 6.00
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
George Stanbridge, of Cleveland
do the family washing, and does not
need a washerwoman.
Vice Consul J. K. Foster writes
from Newcastle that experiments
made in Queensland with the leaves of
the pineapple plant have shown that
there 18 a fiber in them which may
be used in the production of a use
ful kind of siiky cloth,
A child, just born to Mr. and Mrs
Charles Kuenhle at Bucyrus, O., is
its own uncle,
grandfather. Figure it out.
BRILLIANT SUNDAY
PR. T. H.
SERMON
WHITE.
wi: Preparing to Receive
ing.
Lo
was iv
Conventio
by Di
His Hols
But He dr
gradually,
Hight revealing the s
ing the Blood that |
He takes [i=
Word and enlightens
and wo to kn
and tha
§ we 41
come
will for na,
Word will fashion «
fs no pattern in the \
the ohild of God bu
What! times we 0
aur worning papers
Ane notices seems come indication of
the And if He
fs coming soon, He
{rom and recall
jaat recor 1 shall
thine
Lord
what
me?
words
coming of the 1
does
Yon
“Ya
iis
Ce
has come uj
My witnesses”
there boen
more need of wit
election day of antique goods a
cherry bedstead 200 years old was
knocked down to a negro for five
cents,
To keep the plague of rabbits
from destroying the pastoral indus
tries of Australia 16,162 miles of
public and private rabbit-netted
fences have been erected at a cost
of $4,000,000.
|
|
|
Keswick to teach you hoy to be a
witness to Him,
nesses unto Him exactly in propor-
tion as our hearts are the Master's
guest chambers, for only as He lives
in us can He work through us His
wondrous, gracigue, loving purpose,
And what is that purpose? “Whom
He did foreknow, He also did pre-
destinate to be conformed to the
image of His Son, that He might be
the first born RAMONE many breth-
; He b dalla in I] He will
forth, rou you a
Himself, being
the Master, we shall be what He de-
sires
Him.
we should be, witnesses unto
|B sanctified, and indwelt by
oot —————————
God's Hustrated
fove
! Reoch
Dr. Frank
1
elevating.
:ible with-
culture is es-
and that
From sermon
1k Crane, Union
n not
wed Diy
h, Worecesi
—
The Unpardonable Sin.
Mark 5:28
A reference to the text
that the words were elicited
that our Lord's ensmiecs
od Him with working mira-
ans of the Devil--that is,
loing good works by means of
power This, of course, was
ing thelr eves to what they knew
and atiributing works of
} the Davi it was this
wilful and persistent moral blindness
to known trath i + Lord char
wy
{0 he (rae,
holin to
that ©
srterizes ae sin opalnst the Hely
(host. so that it is no ono particular
take various forms, the root of it be-
ing a deliberate closing of the eyes
to what in our heart of hearts we
know to be true~~W. H. Griffith
i wa
Excuses Easy to Find,
A man who seeks an excuse for
neglec: or delay concerning religion
can find such excuse. The man who
seeks religion with his whole heart
will find it. Don’t stumble over your
halting brother; don't get in the way
for him to stumble over you.— Bishop
Fitzgerald,