THE OENTRE REPORTER THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1908, cons A — Democratic County Ticket. For Congress: W. HARRISON WALKER. For Assembly : J. CALVIN MEYER. For Sheriff : FRED F, SMITH. For Register : G. F. WEAVER. For Recorder: F. PIERCE MUSSER, For Treasurer : J. D. MILLER. For County Commissioners : CO. A. WEVER. J. L. DUNLAP. For Auditors : J. W, BECK. JOHN L. COLE. Janlors Lose Again, By the score of 3 to 2 Bpring Mills again defeated the the local junior team on Grange Park Saturday after- noon. The game was a good one, and was always in doubt. The visitors scored the winping run in the ninth inning, and Centre Hall made a bold effort to tie the game, when, with two out, Wm. Bradford hit for two bases ; Allison tried hard to bring home the tying run but Hagan made s good catch of his attempt. The score : - - Cn SPRING MILLS— Brungard, Kreamer, rf .... Musser, 2b wires EUEDAR, | BL srrsniase shook Hagan, y/o - Long, ¢ Finkle, NOOTwWOOOW m Noo < TORE ....cocnseessncivscssmrmmansinnd CENTRE HALL—- Wm. Brudiond, = Bailey, 2b . Garis, 1b...... P. Bradford, If. Hubler, rf.. Baird, of Meyer, 3b Allison, ¢ Smith, p......... = tat CD Totals Spring Mills.......... Centre Hall... Penns Uave Undergoing Repalrs. Extensive repairs and improvements are being made at the Penns Cave house by the new owners of Penns Cave. The hotel is belog repainted on the exterior and lnterior, and the rooms are being repapered and fur. nished on the three floors, A waler system has also been install ed, the water being pumped from a well by a gasoline engine to the attic, and from there is run by gravity to the various parts of the building. Bath and toilet rooms have been in- stalled on the three floors, and every- thing is being made to afford comfort and convenience to the guests who go there for health and recreation. The owners also have in contempla- tion the beautifying of the grounds, and the placing of a new and larger boat to carry passengers into the most euderful cavern: An acetylene search \ & many hunfired eandle power & now in use, and the cave for the first time is being seen in detail. The most curious objects of limestone for- mation have been discovered, and the sightseer is obliged to keep contioual- ly eraniog bis peck to see the many heretofore unobserved objepts of ad- miration. The chef is capable of serving the most fastidious, and can and will do 8) on short notice. Head for Hawaiian College. Prof. John W. Gilmore will leave Pennsylvania State College, about Au- gust 1st, to accept the presidency of the Hawaiisu College, an fnstitution organized under sn act of Congress, and which receives a Federal grant of $30,000. The Hawaiisn legisisture also appropriates $25,000 annually for main- tenance. The faculty for this new in- stitution, which will consist of 2 members, will be selected by President Gilmore. Oak Hall, Mrs. Ada Benner and daughter, Miss Laura, Mrs, Oscar Kishel and son, Harold, and Miss Gertrude Wie land enjoyed a drive to Centre Hall, Friday. Rev. A. A, Black spent some time making calls in this vicinity, last week. A. W. Dale spent several days ib Bellefonte and Hublersburg. Mrs. Bue Peters and son Arthur, of Pine Grove Mills, visited friends in town, last week, Miss Anns M. Dale, of Boalsburg, was the guest of her cousins st Bunny Hillside, Bunday. George Glenn and family, of Biate College, were guests at the home of D, B. Lowder, Bunday. Mrs. Oscar Rishel spent Thursday in Bellefonte. Rev. and Mrs, J. I. Btonecypher, of Boalsburg, were guests of B. F. Ho, man and family, Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs, B. F. Homan attended the Bunday school convention at Btate College, lust week, Mrs. Austin Dale and daughter, Mise Ells, speut Friday among Boals- burg friends. Miss Lavon Ferree ls visiting bar grandparents, at Salons. Mrs. Efward Sellers spent part o last week in Mifflin county. I ——— A TS —— : _ Fmith siadie Noties, The C. H. Bmith photograpie dio, at Centre Hall, will be open they last, at 75 cents per dozen. ; LOCAL AND PERSONAL. { i §- 40 Paragraphs Pidked trom Exchanges of Interest to Reporter Henders, Millheim Jowrn@— . The board ou th of Miliheim, ae newly organi insists of the fol- lowing members: Dr. G. B. Frank, George Ulrich, F. E. Gatelius, H. N, Meyer and A, A. Frank. Becretary, P. H. Musser, Mrs. Lydia A. Musser will leave this (Thursday) morning for a long visit at West Union, Iowa, and other places in the west. Mrs. Musser is 83 years of age and this is her tenth trip to the western states. She will travel alone and will stop enroute at Lafayette, Ind., to spend a week with her grand- daughter, Mra. P. B Brenneman, who is a resident of that place. On Wednesday of last week while Charles Orndorf, of Woodward, with his team was assisting several lumber- men in makiog logs in the woods near that place a tree that was being cut down was twisted off the stump hy the high wind that prevailed and blown onto his team that was stand- ing nearby, One of the horses escaped irjury, but the other had a rib broken and received severe bruises, There sre quite a lot of building operations going on in Millheim this rummer. A. Kessler is building a large addition to his dwelling on North street. Alfred Kreamer will make im- provements on his residence on Penn street, and J. C. Hosterman has the lumber on the ground to build an ex- tension to his house on Main street, A number of other minor improve- ments are pre j cted with work suffie- ient to keep all the carpenters in town busy all summer. Democratic Walchman— Will Carson has been over from Penns Valley this week attending court and says he is still in love with bis new home so that it looks like » perraanent move for William. What is known as the back farm: belonging to the Hunter estate in Buf. falo Run Valley, was not sold at pub lic sule ou Tuesday, us the highest bid offered was ouly $28 50 per acre. The heirs refusing to sccept this the sale was continued. H. B. Moore, of this place, has com- pleted arrangements for the structural steel plant In the old chain works buildings between Bellefonte and Milesburg. While the plant will be started on a small scale it will be equipped to turn out all kinds of steel structural work for buildings, bridges, tipples, ete. Rebersburg. The wet weather has greatly retard. ed the farmers In this vicinity with their spring work, hence Lhere is a great deal of corn still to be planted. C. C. Loong is building an addition to his dwelling house, which improves his home very much The new landlord, Mr Faxon, re cently built & fine porch along the en- tire frout of the hotel. He will make other improvements on the building. Bopervisor Wm. Bair is ecrushiog stones and placing them on the public roads. Mr. Bair understands his busi- ness as supervisor of roads, and the public roads will be greatly improved under his direction. Baturday the Rebersburg basse ball team crossed bate with the Avis team at Tylersville. The score was 7 to 8, in favor of Rebersburg. Floyd Gramley, a student at Peon's State College, spent Bunday under the parental roof, The dwelling house which ©. M. Gramley is erecting st the extreme eastern part of town is nearing com pletion, and will be occupied by Mer vin Kunes sod family. Rev, E. E. Havey preached an ex- cellent memorial sermon Banday fore- noon, in the Evaugelical church. Clem. Bowersox, of Dunlap, Iowa, is visiting bis aged mother, in this place, at present. Transfer of Real Estate, Taney Ormsey, ot. ux., to John Bersh, May 7, 1908, lot in Rush twp. $100. Bamantha ¢'. Bullock, et. bar., to Geo. W, Bullock, April 6, 1908, lot in Huston twp. $1. Margaret Riley to E. C. Riley, May 4, 1908, 24 183p in Harrie twp, $625, Precilla Bmith, et. bar, to H, R. Treaster, July 12, 1907, lot in Rush twp. $25, Angela Fasbinder Hennls, et. bar., to Paul Huw, et, ux., May 13, 1908, lots in 8. Philipsburg. $600, A ball team made up from the class of 1910 of the Agricultural Department, at Pennsylvania State College, and Centre Hall will meet on Grange Park diamond Centre Hall, Baturday after noon, The game will, without doubt, be one worth seeing. 39th County S. S. Convention { Continued from first page.) singing, ** God be with Jou Hie by one buf of the number of § luna | SNOW BLINDNESS. Phe Way This Terrible ‘Affliction Af- fects Its Victims. Snow blindness is an afiliction little known through description, though not very difficult to describe, for here the strongest adjectives need few qualifi- cations. The paln does not follow im- mediately upon the straining which seems to be its cause. After a long day of haze the traveler finds when he gets into camp that his eyes are a Mt- tle itchy and that they water if he comes too near a fire or any source of heat. Later they feel as If there were a trace of smoke in the tent, then as If a grain or two of sand had got under the eyelids and finally as if the eye sockets were lined with sandpaper. Every movement of the eye causes pain, and then the pains begin to come without a provoking roll of the eye- ball. At first there is a dull ache, grow- ing gradually sharper untill toward morning of a sleepless night it throbs through the eyes every few seconds, with twinges comparable to, but not equaled by. the shooting pains of tooth- ache. It i= the only affliction with the pain of which the ordinary Eskimo cries out. The severity of the attack diminishes toward the end of the first twenty-four hours. For the larger part of that thine the sufferer usually keeps his tent, moauing and occasionally cry- ing out sharply, lying on his face, with both hands covering his closed eyes to keep out the faintest possible light. On the second or perhaps third day he Is able to travel, but Is very nearsighted ind sees everything double. In a week or xo, if the weather is hazy or he has a0 goggles, the same individual may have another attack, but the first at- tack of the year Is the most severe ap- parently Every attack weakens the eves and predisposes to further attacks, which--so at least the Eskimos believe finally lead to total blindness, an af- fliction rather common among the Es- klmos Keeping the eyes from strain and, if possible, focusing them continually on some dark object, such as a black dog In one's team, I8 belleved by the na- tives to be the chief safeguard. The same view Is held by many of the roy- al northwest mounted podlice. whose duties within the arctic and plains of the northwest frequently ex- pose them to snow blindness. Nothing perhaps could more clearly bring out the trying nature of the affiction than the fact that one or more suicides among the policemen on spring duty in the northwest are attributed to Inability to bear the pain of snow blindness. Occasionally the police employ the amusing but apparently rather effective device of paluting the nose black and trying to focus the eyes upon it. The type of nose may have something to do with the effectiveness of this scheme. ~V. Btefansson in Harper's Magazine ou the Why We Sleep. The well known explanation that the stufflness of the atmosphese In a hurd the cause of sleepiness In members of the congregation Is, ac cording to the Revue Sclentifique (Paris), “tosufficlent.” If this hypothe sls were tenable, argues our authority, it Is manifest that the congregation, or those members of it who react readily to a soporific agent, would go to sleep before the sermon began. Now, It Is ootorious that the sleeping is done dur ing the sermon. The true explanation Is that the auditor unconsciously hyp notizes himself or herself by concen: trating the gaze for a long period on a single object, whether the countenance of the preacher or the pulpit or what not. The wore desperate the effort to heed the sermon the surer this effect of self hypootization. Those who sleep during the sermon are consequently the very members of a congregation who are entitled to the highest praise for their consclentious effort to follow the words of the preacher.—Current Literature. One System That Won. “He who breaks the bank today will be broken by the bank tomorrow,” was a favorite saying of M. Blane, founder of the casino at Monte Carlo, There have been many systems that were called Infallible Invented for the purpose of breaking the bank from the D’Alembert to the Rosslyn and Lahou- chere, but only one of them all has ever given the keepers of the bank a moment's teal anxiety. This was the discovery of a keen eyed old lady who observed that If the croupler spun with certald numbers opposite him certain other numbers inevitably won. As a matter of fact, it was all very simple. The roulette wheel had become wmrp- ed and was not quite round and thus Invariably stuck at easily ascertainable figures. This little discovery put 300, 000 francs into the pockets of the old lady and her accomplices before M. Blane bought the secret for 70,000 france. Westminster Gazette, B8ome German Composers. In answer to a correspondent “Men- estrel” gives a list showing the “crea- tiveness” of some German composers. Franz Abt, according to the figures pabiistied, “ereated 2,610 compositions, of which 1,070 were choruses, 100 duets and 1,134 songs. Johann Sebas- tian Bach Is credited with 1,102 com- positions, of which 225 were for the or- gan and 611 were choruses. Beetho- ven's compositions are placed at 439; Brahms, 638; Handel, 807; Haydn, 873; Liszt, 055; Mozart, when he was thir. ty-five years old, had written G20 com. positions; Raff, 610; Rubinstein, 550; Schubert thirty-one years old, 791; Schumann, forty-six years old, 071 _Cmerny and Diabelll, for pedagogical purposes, rank highest ne statistician did tended for MUST PROTECT PUBLIC WEALTH + Owner of Mill From Which Sewage Flowed Into the Béhuyleil! River Is Held Guilty, . Judge Swartz, of the Montgomery county courts, in delivering his opinion sald: “The act of the legislature is a police regulation for the protection of the public health, This is a highly Lene- it is doing much to promote health.” Porter, of the superior court, in his opinion said: "The statute was passed in the exercise of the police power of the state, That power ua- doubtedly extends to all regulations af- eciing the health, morals, peace and safety of soclety. All sorts of wirit and burdens are imposed under this power, and when these are not in conflict with any constitutional prohibition, or fundamental principle, they cannot be successfully assailed in a judicial tribunal. That the preser- vation of the waters of the state from pollution, involving danger to health, is a proper subject for the exercise of police cannot be seriously questioned.” widespread Importews« is the cent decision of the supreme court of Pennsylvania upholding the constitu tionality of the act of Apuil 22, 190% known as the “Purity of Water Law,” under which the commissioner of walth i3 glven power ® protect the streams of the state from pollution. The case in question was the "Come monwealth of Pennsylvania against Bd. ward Emmers,” and had been carried by the defendant from the Norristown county courts to the superior court and then to the supreme court, the decision in each instance party violating the Purity of Water Law by polluting a stream with sewage. The defendant is the owner and oper- ator of the hosiery mil gltuated on or near the banks of the Se! il river, in Montgomery county, where em ploys a large numbew 4 operators. Nine water closets for the use of these employes, sewage from all of which closets was discharged by a single pipe into the Schuvikiil river, were declared by the issloner of healtif®to be a menace to public health, and the de fendant given notiee that this dis sewage must te discontinued provisions of the Purity of Falling ® comply with mill owner was prose public Judge good order, 10118 the power ) re convicting the sil IVi¥ he comm was charge of under the Water Law, the law, the cuted. rf rt— The Thrice-a-Week New Vork World will be mailed all Centre Reporter sub scribers for sixty-five cents, paid in ad- vance, The World wil be discon- tinued every yéar upon exdfiration of subscription. or Layer Whether a hen is a loaf. er or a layer depends up- on the condition of the Jpestive organs which are responsibie for all growth and egg production. Feed DR. HESS Poultry Pan-a-ce and we will refund your money if it fails to increase egg production sufficient to pay for itself many times over, besides curing poultry diseases. One extra egg per month pays for the Pan-a-ce-a afid 300 per cent, profit, Just think of it, it cost only a penny a day for thirt fowls. Come in and let us tell you more about this preparation, or better still, let us mpply you with a trial package, ur money back if not satisfactoty. 1-2 Ibs 2gc, 8 Ibs. God. Instant Louse Killer Kis Lice For Sale by D. A. Boozer, Centre Hall Also Dealer in All Kinds of SADDLERY HOME MADE HARNESS A Specialty WE ARE PREPARED TO SHOW YOU OUR SPRING LINE OF. Pleased to have you come and see the line before making your purchases C. A. Krape ss The Spring and Summer Models in Clothing, Hats, Shirts, Etc, are the most stylish offered. They embrace Kuppenheimer Suits, Savoy and New Columbia Shirts, Imper- ial, Guyer, and Hopkins Hats. In Neckwear the Best of Keiser's [mportations. Lilley and Likly Suit Cases and Bags. . . Of course you know how com- plete our Tailoring--Made-to-order Clothing is. Penna LE ee - A FINE LINE OF ...Ladies’ Shoes for Spring... RADCLIFFE SHOES OXFORDS RUSSETS and PATENT LEATHER Also Line Men's Fine Shoes OXFORDS, RUSSETS and PATENT LEATHER ¢ Kreamer & Son. Centre Hall SW BN BV BH DD BDH VB NW WWD N Sala dh dh THE 1908 IMPROVED De Laval CREAM SEPARATORS Are Now Realy For Your Inspection Ten New Styles fo “New Price A Size for Every Day, from he Smallest to the Latgest, D. W. Bradford, Selling Agt. CENTRE HALL, PA. Stationery for Ladies, A fine grade of box paper, baviog embossed at the top “Centre Hall, Pa.” has just been added to the assortment of for ladies. Tie quality aud style are good gnough for the vee DR SMITH'S SALVE of a queen. ST Th Te ee J