The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 16, 1908, Image 7

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    yap ios
ST Lacy Senna
acts gently yel prompl-
l onthe bowels, cleanses
e system effectually,
assists one in overcoming
habitual constipation
yevmanently. To get its
eneficial effects buy
the denuine.
lanufactured by the
ALIFORNIA
Fic Syrup Co.
SOLD BY LEADING DRUCGISTS - 501 pe-BOTTLE
WIDOWS under NEW LAW obtained
PENSIONS “Watingon bos
Waashingwn, IL CQ
In France
11181
enacted whi with he
fine and
ment any conductor or
automobile who, having
sort of accident, or
in a collision with any other vehicle
or individual or object, does not
immediately stop and give his name
and address to the police or to other
representatives of the law Th
punishment is to be specifically im-
posed, quite irrespective of the mer-
its of the casze itself,
LV)
several months’ imprison-
owner
caused
who having
Of an
any
been
About 40 differet kinds of
and dolphins are known, and
though they live in the open 3¢
look like fish, they not
all, but are true mammals, breathing
air and feeding their young on milk.
like cows and horses.
ir
ais
a and
are fish a
Hicks' Capudine Cures Women's
Monthly Pains, Nervousness,
and Headache. It's Linuid Effects imme
diately. Prescribed by physicians with best
results. 10c., 25c., and 50¢., at drug stores
A Fireless Locomotive,
One of the most recent
in locomotives the firs
now used in Germany
ed for shunting work
driven by one man. TI!
engine is filled with
generating station,
will work for four or five ho
locomotive accordin
London Globe, is first thre
filled with superheated
then the steam is tted
oughly mixed. The steam
ted at a re of 170 pounds
the square inch, and it is found
only half an atmosphere
sure is lost in transferr
powerhouse to the engl
ing requires 8 or 10 minutes
boiler,
adm
silal
nresen
preEssa
Overlooked.
Aunt—Tommy, | put three
here yesterday, and now
one at?
pies in
there is only
How is ths
Tommy-— Please, it dark,
aunty, I didn’t see Punch
A Decorative Accomplishment.
“S80 you are going to teach your
daughter music?
“Yes,” answered Mrs. Ti
“just enough to give us an excuse
for having a piano lamp and a ma-
hogany rack.” Washington
Star.
was so
that ofie!
ingilt,
music
She Knew The Formula.
A stranger approached a little girl
who was somewhat accustomed to
interviews with the usual question,
“What's your name, little girl?”
The little girl, without looking up
from her sandpile, replied: “My
name is Edith- and I'm four. She's
my little sister; her name's Mildred
and she's two. | don't want to go
with you and be your little girl, and
I know you can’t steal my little sis
Harper's Weekly
DIFFERENT NOW.
Athlete Finds Better Training Food
It was formerly the belief that to
become strong, athletes must
plenty of meat.
This is all out of date now, and
many tralners feed athletes on the
well-known food, Grape-Nuts, made
of wheat and barley, and cut the meat
down to a small portion, once a day.
“Three years ago,” writes a Mich.
man, “having become interested in
athletics, I found I would have to stop
eat
of food.
“1 got some Grape-Nuts and was
soon eating the food at every meal
for 1 found that when I went on the
track, I feit more lively and active.
“Later, 1 began also to drink
Postum in place of coffee and the way
I gained muscle and strength on this
diet was certainly reat. On the day
of a field meet in June | weighed 124
pounds. On the opening of the foot-
ball season in Sept, 1 weighed 140.
I attributed my fine condition and
good work to the discontinuation of
improper food and coffee, and the
using of Grape-Nuts and Postum, my
principal diet during training season
being Grape-Nuts,
“Before I used Grape-Nuts I never
felt right In the morning always
kind of ‘out of sorts’ with my stom-
ach. But now when I rise [ feel good,
and after a breakfast largely of
Grape-Nuts and cream, and a cup of
Postum, I feel like a new man.”
“There's a Reason.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to
Wellville,” In pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time,
are genuine, true, and fall of human
interest,
WESTINGHOUSE PLANT GETS
$1,500,000 ORDERS,
Pittsburg (Special) — The
addition to the rapidly accumulating
that industrial conditions
are improving in the Pittsburg dis-
trict comes from the Westinghouse
Companies, whose plans in the East
Pittsburg section received ordere ag-
latest
These orders are not confined to
one part. of the country, but come
from all sections, whil? Mexico cons
tributes something worthy of notice.
The business for May was 15 per
higher than for the carlier
months of the vear, while June show-
an advance of 23 per cent, July
has opened with prospects that or-
will almost reach the normal
buginess of the corporations
Over 90 per cent. of the plants of
the American Sheet & Tin Plate Co.
are in operation, and as the wag
scales have been signed there are no
clouds on the horizon.
The demand for window glass, with
the country practically bare of sal
able sizes, means that all factories
will be in operacion as soon as forces
can be organized and the fires start
d Some factories are still In opera-
tion in the | an unheard-of
proceeding in the glass trade,
William B. Scarfe & Sons, machin-
received a contract for $50,000
of work from the Teanesseo
Iron & Railroad Co.
ast fire,
sts,
worth
Coal,
JEALOUS OF MURDERED WIFE.
At the
in the
was si
(Special). Coro
held
Reading
ner's inquest here caso
of Mrs Massler,
on June by her
then killed himself, after coming here
from Chicago, a theory as to
cause of the double tragedy was es-
tablished All testimony pointed
the fact that Massler was extremely
jealous of his wife, and that he de
clared she wag not true to bim
There was also testimony which
tended to show that Massler's father
Michael Massier, who is now
Philadelphia hospital as che resuit of
slashing his throat with a razor dar
ing the funeral of his son, knew his
son intended to murder his wife and
that the revolver used was owned bj
the elder Massler.
ft was also brought
had been a tacit agreement
Massler and hie son to come
ing together on July 4, with
of getting rid of wife by
of a supposed accident
The jury rendered a
the woman shot by
with premeditacdon
John who Tot
husband, who
29
olit that there
betwee:
to Read
ides
means
the
tiie
that
husband
verdi
her
Was
TO PAY THE STATE.
AE fn Te
Attorney
PROMPT
Harrisburg
sult of a conference between
wid, Attorney
'unnin Treasures
Sheatz and Attorney A. J
for the Commonwealth, and Attorney
Burleigh and Director Wil
Latshaw, for the suspended
National Bank, it
amicable agreement will
whereby the state wil
the full amount of it;
in that institution
Irvin t
{ ped fal)
Depury Gen
General T
State
eral «
Edwards
Clarence
Ham H
Allegheny
sd that an
be reached,
shortly receive
$523,000 deposit
with interest
The conference
sider whether or
ig belies
was called to con
not an agreement
ould be reached for a settlement
without waiting for the outcome
he litigation in the Allegheny Coun
v courts over the relative respon-
ibility of the bondsmen.
While fio definite action was taken,
nove the tangle.
SHOOTS HIS SERENADERS.
Allentown (Special). — With the
sxelamation, ‘I'll teach them a les-
son.” Amandes Milles, of Danielsville,
Aired two shots into a trowd of young
nerrymakers who had gathered
about hig home to serenade him and
soung men, two of them seriously,
and three slightly.
The rest of the party, including a
number of young women, escaped,
although the shot was fired at short
range. and the young yeople were
Josely grouped.
The young men shot are: Steward
Gable. 27. Cherryville, left arm
blown to pleces, shot believed to
have penecrated her heart, will die;
Charles Easterday, 25, shot removed
from back of body from heel of head,
slightly injured; Albert Zimmerman,
Walter Minnich and Howard New
hard, all of Danielsville,
Father and son were arrested.
Lancaster (Special). ~The contro
versy between the rival factions of
the Swedenborgian Church, for the
$40,000 Frederick J. Kramp estats
was continued before Judge Smith In
the Orphans’ Court here. Doctrinal
differences, arising largely out of the
construction placed upon Sweden.
borg's famous work, “Conjugal
Love,” formed a conspicuous feature
of the testimony.
The branch of the chureh knows
as the general convention accuses
their opponents, the. general church
which exerciees supervision over the
academy at Bryn Athyn, near Phila
delphia, of teaching a principle ol
immorality and claims that it there
fore cannot receive the legacy be
cause ita teaching is contrary to eivil
uw and subversive of public mor
ality.
swiidbliain sos
MAIL POUCH ROBBED,
Williamsport (Special) <A al)
pouch containing several hundred let
ters and a large number of checks
was robbed at the Philadelphia &
Reading depot at Halis Station, ten
miles east of here.
The postal asuchorities had not
missed it until it was found lying
along the tracks near the station. It
had been cut open and part of its
contents removed.
COMMERCIAL COLUMY.
mms—
Weekly Review of Trade and Lates:
Market Reports.
KH. G Dun & Co.'s Review or
Trade says:
"Midsummer quiet is augmented
this year by the general contraction
that has occurred in all departments
of trade and Industry, but splendid
progress of the crops strengthens
confidence in the future, and pre-
paration for a large volume of fall
business is gradually increasing the
percentage of active machinery. Er-
ratic fluctuations in prices of raw
material retarded Improvement In
the cotton goods Industry, but the
recent sharp advance in hides and
leather on account of small receipts
of eattle failed to check progress at
shoe factories, and a fair tonnage
of new husiness 18 received by the
steel mills, Semi-annual clearance
sales of dry goods were well attend
ed, country merchants replenishing
and reports from all sections of the
of lightwelght wearing apparel
freight ears have been reduced
less than 350.000 and many railroad
shops are resuming repair work,
to
Whaolesais Markets
York. — Wheat
exports, 16,035 bushels:
8,500,000 futures, 80.000 spot
firm. No. 2 red, 97% @ 98%
vator; No. 2 red, 98%, f. 0. b
No. 1 Northern Duluth, 1.174
b. afloat; No. 2 hard winter,
Lo. b. afloat
Corn-—Receipis, 3,225 bushels:
ports,
bushels:
nominal
f. o. b. afloat.
Oats — Receipts, 85.500
Bpol steady. Mixed, 26 to 32 pounds,
54@55; natural white, 26 to 21
pounds, 574 @59; clipped white, 32
to 40 pounds, LH9@ 68
Poultry—Allve, steady: spring
chickens, 20; fowls, 12; turkeys, 13
Dressed, irregular; Western
chickens, 15@22; turkeys,
- wy
Now
none
Receipts,
rales,
Spot
ele
afloat 2
a [. o
1.02%
ex
5.000
0%
2,250 bushels:
spot firm
elevator and
sales,
No -,
79% nominal
bushels;
1217;
Cheese— Weak :
boxes. new State,
ial ‘
als, 11% @Q 12%; do., small
and white, fancy, 11%: do.
10% ; do, good to prime, 10@ 10 5:
do, common, SL @ 9%; skims, 1 “
8%
Eggs—Iirregular: receipts, 16.947
cases; State, Pennsylvania, and near-
by fancy white, 23@ 24: do.
choice, 22; brown and
fancy, do., prime to choice, 206
21: Western
17% @
Western price},
17@ 17%.
Philadelphia. Wheat le. higher:
contract grade, July, 893% @ 90¢
Corn—Firm; for local trade, 73 @
5,268
spec
receipls,
full cream,
10 «0 Qu
a9
22,
average, prime,
firsts
18;
(official
78¢c.
Oats—Firm:
ORL @ 50.
Butter — Steady:
creamery, 24¢.; do.
26
Eggs
No. 2 white, natural,
exira
nearby
Firm, good demand: Penn
18¢c. at mark: do., current re
in returnable cases, 18% at
mark: Western firsts, free cases,
at mark: do., current
cases, 18 at mark
Cheese—-Dull and
York full creams. choice,
fair to good, 11 @ 11%.
Baltimore. Flour. Dull
changed; receipts, 4.448%:
377.
Wheat Strong; spot, contract,
G0 @Q90%;: spot No. 2 red West
ern, P22 @O2%; July, 80% @ 80;
August, 80 G80; Septoamber
$11, @91%;: steamer No. ( red
B64 @861;;. receipts, 51,984; new
Southern by sample, 72@ 88; new
Southern on grade, 86@ 90.
Corn—Firmer; spot, mixed 76:
No. 2 white, 79; July, 76; Septem:
ber, 77 asked. receipts, 6,105,
Oats—8teady; No. 2 white, 594%
59%. No. 3 white 5TH @59; No
2 mixed, 57@57%: receipts 8,636
Rye-—Guiet; No. 2 Western ex
port, E8@ 89; No. 2 Western domes
tic, S5@ 89; receipts, 737.
Hay-—Firmer; No. 1
13.00@ 13.50; No. 1 clover
10.50@ 11.00.
Butter—Firm; Maney
20@ 21; fancy creamery, 25; fancy
iadle, 19@ 20; store packed, 17% ©
18.
Eggs—Steady, unchanged, 17% 4
18.
Cheese—Flirm,
large, 12%; new flats,
small, 13.
ceipts,
lower;
12¢.; du.
and un
exports,
timothy,
mixed
unchanged;
12%;
new
new
Live Block,
New York.~~Beeves-— Receipts, 1,
122. No trading; feeling weak; ex
ports today, 2,600 quarters of beef
Calves — Receipts, 83: market
quiet and steady; veals, 4.756@ 6.50
Bheep and Lambs — Receipts, §,-
396; sheep, steady; lambs, steady to
10e. higher; sheep, 2.756 to 4.20;
lambs, 5.00 to 6.65.
Chicago.~Cattle-— Receipts, 4,000;
market steady; steers, 6 .90@ 8.25;
cows, 8.60@5.76; helfers, 3.50@
6.90; bulls, 3.00@5630; calves,
5.40@ 6.26; stockers and feeders,
3.00@ 5.15.
Hogs-~Receipts, 26,000; market,
65@ 10c. lower; cholce heavy ship-
ping, 6.50@ 6.65; butchers, 6.45@
6.66; light mixed, 6.25@6.35;
choice Hght, 6.36 @6.456; packing,
bI6@640; pigs, 4.560@6.00,
Sheep Receipts, about 12,600,
market easy; sheep, 2.95@ 4.25;
lambs, 4.60@5.50; yearlings, 4.004
THIS AND THAT.
John Starr, a gill fisherman ai
Gloucester City, N. J, In drawing in
his nets pulled up two kegs of beer,
one of which he sold for $2.50.
In China the salt tax is a govern:
ment monopoly. It is one of the
pricipal revenues of the empire,
yielding about $9,000,000 a year.
Much as it rains In England, there
still prevails an indisposition on the
part of both men and women tg
wear rubber overshoes,
i
PROOF FOR TWO CENTS.
If You Suffer With Your Kidneys and
Back Write to This Man.
G. W. Winney, Medina, N. Y., In-
viies kidney sufferers to write to him.
X To all who enclose
postage he will re-
ply, telling how
Doan’s Kidney Pills
cured him after he
had doctored and
had been in two dif-
ferent hospitals for
eighteen months,
x suffering intense
pain in the back,
lameness, twinges
when stooping or
lifting, languor, dizzyspells and rheu-
matism. “Before I used Doan's Kid-
ney Pills,” says Mr. Winney, ‘1
weighed 143, After taking 10 or 12
boxes | weighed 162 and was com-
pletely cured.”
Sold by all dealers.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
The Weather Prophet.
“1 alw ays have been
that thers
under
npression ought to be
and now
hat
OWE someth
and al)
gt of my
ously
dictions that
a thunders!
ing
Keeps
ur ordinary
would go out and enjoy our
drives us indoors
al ‘thunder heads
day recently whe
the weather
ursion at his sug-
days, he
he ond
spoke of
On an ext
soaked to
start
charter
at
and got the skin
that
members.’
he Wii BOC Ie)
nf the
Attending Strictly To Business
Fhe Leroy
hn E Watrous,
ue geputy
Reporter tells this story
of Burling
collectorg of
x AIOLE a
urna
Having A Good Time
ieal ills
to
1alesale 8( of phys
yd thing,
of a
ol f Dependent
wrote his father thus
Dear Papa: We
rf a good
broke his leg
orn
according
boy in the
Children, who
children are
here now Mr
and can’t work
on a picnic and it rained
ail got Many children
sick wit he mumps. Mr
fell off the wagon and broke
can work a litte
is digging
si v
tithe
went
here are
Higgins
his rib. but he
The man that
well
because we threw sand
machine. and made black and blue
marks on us. Ernest cut
badly We are all
From the Delineator
Effects Of Lightning.
Prof. A. Herschel, in the Quarterly
Society for October last,
the extraordinary effects produced by
lightning in the midst of an open
moor in Northumberland
four or five feet
this Lialf a dozen furrows ex-
tended orn all sides Pieces of tur!
were thrown In
one three feet
the hole. Investigation showed that
in addition to the effects visible on
the surface, small holes had been
bored in the earth radiating from
the large excavation,
A New Auto Danger.
Hedgehogs are said to be causing
lots of trouble for Bangor automobil
ists, who are fond of the wooded
highways a score of miles from the
city in the evening these spiny,
bristling animals are often found in
the roads, and, fascinated by the
glare of the head lamps of the motor
cars, refuse to budge from the track,
with the result that they are often
run over. The danger lies in the
sharp quills which pierce the tires,
making a puncture which cripples
the car and is hard to mend. —Kene-
bec Journal,
Unnecessarily Scared.
A young man had been calling now
and then on a young lady when one
night, as he sat in the parlor waiting
for her to come down, her mother
entered the room instead and asked
him in a very grave, stern way what
his intentions were,
He turned very red and was about
to stammer some {incoherent reply
when suddenly the young lady called
down from the head of the stairs:
“Mamma, mamma, that Is not the
one." — Ladies’ Home Journal,
When Women Admired Whiskers,
For ages bedTds were the delight
of anclent beauties. The sight of
a shaved chin excited sentiments of
borror and avergion. To obey tha
injuctions of his bishops, Louis Vii
of France cropped his hair a la pom- |
padour. and shaved off his luxuriant |
whiskers. Eleanor Aquitane, his con-
found him with this uncom-
mon appearance very ridiculous and
very contemptible: Bhe revenged
herself by becoming something more
than a coquette. The king obtained |
a divorce. 8he then married the |
Count of Anjou, who shortly after- |
ward ascended the English throne,
and gave him as her marriage dower
the rich provinces of Poltou and
Guienne And this was the origin!
of those wars which for 200 vears
ravaged France and which the
French nation 3,000,000 men: all of
which, probably, had
taken
place if Louis VII had not been
ag to shave £
off
which he !
gusting {0 the
sort,
Cost
fiever
the System
Take the Old Standard Guaove's Taste
LESS CHI Tox 10 fnow what
you
them visit
FITS Bt Vitus Dance: Nervous Diseases per.
manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise frea,
Dr. H R. Kline, Ld4..981 Arch Bt. Phila, Pa.
When a girl wants you to
BIEN she
more fi ah 2
nore 4 yut it than if
gEqueeze
MAK
didn’t
wil
ghie
are
Do Your Feo: Ache and Bura?
Bhake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a
for the feet It makes ight or
Cures Corns, Bunjons
. Hot, Smartivg and Sweating Feet
and Ingrowing Nails. Soid by all arufguts
shoe stores, 25 cts. Sample sent FReg,
Die men out of
on
SaGVite
Hicks' Capudine Cures Headache,
Whether from Cold, Heat
Mental Strain. No Acet nil
It's liquid
i0¢., 23¢., end 50c.,
Stomach, or
d or dangerous
Effects immediately.
at drug stores,
It the average man could he
] i= way abo
i ge!
Lives
H.H, Gaexx's SBoxs, of Atlanta Gn, are
the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the
See their Hberal offer in advertises
nent in another column of this paser
1! vocal culture
Woman's
to the volume
doesn’t
better it at
' hereof
make a
voice least adds
teething, softens thegumes, redocesinflamma.
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle |
When three or four women got
together the silence becomes s0 thick
TWO CURES OF ECZEMA.
Baby Had Severe Attack—Grand- |
father Suffered Torments with
the Disease—Owe Recovery
to Cuticura.
“In 884 my grandeon, a babe had an |
tors to the extent of heavy bills and an in.
crease of the disease and suffering, I rec. |
ommended Cuticura snd in a few weeks
the child was well. He is today a strong
became an intense sufferer. A whole win:
ter pagsed without once having on shoes, |
nearly from the knees to the toes being
I tried many
doctors to no purpose. Then 1 procured |
the Cuticura Remedies and found immedi.
ate improvement and final cure. M W, |
LaRue, B45 Beventh St., louisville, Ky, |
April 23 and May 14, 1907.”
If it wasn't for Sunday School |
much fun.
because of son
ment this happi
VETS wi
ubject should
for healil
ion
¢
(
ec
Mrs. Maggie
‘ w
in a
When
f:
Lydia E. Pi
) my de
Ky., writes :
to help
me
mother."
ham’s Vegetable
gtandard
women
displa
tion, fibroid
periodic pains, t
ing-down feeling,
Why don’t you tx
long
Ly
y the
Gilmer,
to M:
nkham's
am
for
vit?”
ivy
il
is
she has guide
aealth.
alone cannot do. A
germicidal, disin-
»d
izing toilet requisite
of exceptional ex-
cellence and econ-
omy. lavaluable
for inflamed eyes,
throat and nasal and
uterine catarrh, At
drug and toilet
stores, 50 cents, or
by mail postpaid
Large Trial Sample
WITH WEALTH AND BE
you wish
PATENTS ===
Have secured over
AUTY
Reg.
your
Aly
10 assure ease and
others les
model,
readily, write us for
these rhoes
Whether
the best
We ‘otter a a
resul
book
For adults
the
it