The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, September 03, 1908, Image 6

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    lh it Pa
GHANGI ERS’ HEAD CRITICISES
ROADS. :
Williams Grove (Special)
Master WF. Hil, the
Grange in his address the Grang-
pienic criticised the meth-
ods of the State way Depart.
ment in building roads He
declared the highways are ‘mproper-
ly constructed by the officials and
a4 greater cost than necessary
He advocated the building ‘of
roads and the advancer
lic schools, but urged
provide the money ne
lieve the people of
affected from the burden
now imposed upon them
vited the people ro join
and become identified with a
ment to accomplish this
through the Legislat:
The speaker further urged
pas of a bill giving trolleys
of State
at
ers here,
High
State
1
il
good
nent of
pub-
th
aat tn e
e Stat
assary and re-
localities
taxation
He in
grange
HIVE
ills
he
yf
‘he
med
ure
sage ad
ditional rights of way and compelling
them to haul freight
ings banks were also
Hill
On
the met
De par
A
ment
State Is
speak of
portation
the p blic
part of it
over our
haul over
seen n
products
tion origin
are
Postal
irged
SAV-
by : Mr
the ads and
subject Mi RO r
it Highwat
hods of
ment, Mr
leading f
of every
$11
Ket
CO1l niry
among
immovabl
mend
pari; In
e ight
mile,
they
an
ment
surfa
few
roa:
edu
ive
of
shoul
township
inf
or
takes
any
and
tice
a large
cont
the
er
with
of per:
Mil
ract price - the
mselveg obligated
sum than was {
"As it has been fully demon it
ed that thes» road at
this vast exper standing
i thnk it is time some other
plan in many the State
this 29.000 per iid make five
or six miles of gravel com-
pact earth road, if
the direction patent
ing advice, would all Jogal
uirements, could aintained
good condition competent
rection from the State Highway
partment, and would be a
road Jor many months ore
‘han the present kind
ihe idea of Governor St
ontinuous good
“tate is worth
t.0n
‘And ther
that the Gr
mon schools
tem taxation real
bear nearly all the
government, and it
fact that the taxes on
about five times
taxes on an ial valuation in
sonal or corporate property
cat on is not a local matter, and
the State assumes to partially
late the number of months of ac
and also the teachers
proper that it should
expense of our public schools
State could then with propriety
force the compulsory education. This
would make uniform educational op-
portunities throughout the State.
and would be a long step toward
securng that Grange demand of
‘Greater Equalization in Taxation.'™
buil even
$e not
to
part
mile wo
good
and
ME
reat
¥
i Of
or
built
engin
M ngin
De m in
di-
De-
under
in n
111 ever he
uart to
ACTOS
cons.dera-
roads the
1y of careful
factor in tural
ange fosters
1 nds ,
is our
iT present
efdtate
expense
is a tr
real estate
higher than
com
ays
has te
for
of
local
ent
per
©
regen
1
sd
bear the
The
York (Special). -Beveral tramps
are charged with setting fire to and
burning a grain shed belonging to
Mrs. Catherine Hoke, near this city,
destroying several large wagons,
eighty bushels of grain and a lot
of hay. The loss of the building
is about $800. The tramps had been
sleeping in the building and had re-
rently been deprived of thelr pleas.
ant quarters.
1
MINE HORRORS OF STATE TO BE
PROBED.
(Special). A confer-
ence dealing with mining conditions
in the United States and the
number fatalities resulting
accidents is being held
here, Victor Watteyne, chief of the
Belgian Department of Mines, who
arrived here from New York a
guest of the United States Govern-
ment, is conferring with Clarence
Hall, of the United States Geologi-
cal Survey, who in charge of the
Government experimental station
here, and J. W. Paul, chief of the
Department Mines West Vir-
ginia
A
Pittsburg
great of
from mine
as
is
of of
igation of the
Monongah,
k. Pa., and Fay-
made Abont
Desborrough,
Meissner, of
thorough invest!
ecelit mine disa
W. Va.: Jacobs Cree
City, Pa., will
September 1, Captain
of England. and Herr
Germany, th expert mining engi-
neers, will join Mr Watteyne in the
investigation, for whie
appropriated $150,000
The abandoned
Wy., where
death, will
efght he
vestigat
} t sters at
x
elite be
uo
Hanna,
’
mine at
seven { me
also be 1hout
will 1
in this
the in
on
BiG
FIRE
TACKY
AT FRACRKVILLE.
ille (Special) A
arelessly
thriry
poolroon
IOTHER
1
HELD AS ABDUCTOR.
IDE ATTEMPT FAILS
taken
drained a
constable
le to pre.
a passing
the speed laws were
endeavor gave the
being
risoner
The
that the
of laudanum
act, but was unab
He summoned
and
the
jail
tie
aw t
vent ft
iutomobile
broken in
man’s Nte
to
POT, ATO CROP NO FAILURE.
John W. Wogan,
York
ial)
the
York (Spec
of
cultural Society
of the
heing a
gerated
The potato crop.’
an, is not a fatlure
that potatoes have not yielded well
in some parts of the county, bul
are other sections where the
has heen up to the standard
the lower end of the dounty, ‘es
ecially, the yield has been good
There are many patches of fine
president County Agri-
, Says the re.
York County potalo
failure are greatly ex
that
05s 4
ports
crop
says Mr. Wog
It is true
of the tubers is
as high as some
do not think the
The price
not going to be
people assert I
—— A 50 OH SA
Warrant Out For Farmer's Slayer.
York (Special) -—A warrant charg.
ing Elias Bears with murder was is-
sued in accordance with instructions
given by District Attorney Ammon.
Sears shot Lewis Barbour, a farmer,
of near Delta, on August 15. The
injured man died from the effects
of the bullet wound in his head.
GAVE His LIFE IN VAIN.
Allentown (Special). Four-year.
old Clarence Rinker, of S8herersville,
gave up his life in a heroic effort
to save his 17-year-old sister, Min-
nie, who was fatally burned.
The girl started a fire with kero-
pene, when the can exploded, In
an instant she was ablaze, and. in
his attempt to smother the flamos
the boy's clothing caught fire and he
was literally roasted alive, although
an older brother, who eame to the
rescue, threw him ia & trough of
water, . :
WHEN THE HORSE FLAGS.
If the horse flags, and his legs
become unsteady, unhitch at once, put
cold water on his head and on
back of his neck and rub with coarse
cloths. If near a drug store inject
forty or more grains of quinina..
Sponge his mouth with cold water.—
Indiana Farmer.
LLAWNS.
give a list
suitable for
I would name:
TREES FOR SMAIL
1 have been asked to
of trees of medium size
planting on small lots,
Cut-leaved birch, mountain agh, pur-
ple-leaved beech; the
and cornus florida, or white
dogwood, The best
general use are the
Colorado blue, Norway
From “The Making
Home,” by Eben E
Outirg Magazine
flowered
ns for
spruces
evergre
three
and
of a
Rexford,
hemlock.
Country
in
the
COW E
get the
the
WHAT THE
Scmetimes we
the re a
she will give
ghe ts that
thing
ter, go that
be an actual ance
duction of milk What
io is feed the cow all
and to advantage
gers the story
left is a pretiy
feeding
Farmers’
COW als
If she assimilates
a fact, but
overdoin
more
is ther
gk the
Of
such As
the
hinds
SXCeEs
to
turn
tell
over Bix
we are too much
things Home Journa
MOULTING
is no
when
1
y} Wel
There
Owl
time
vigor
ficated as at
f § &
its
moult in
jaying
a ule have
properly fed
During the
Fowls that
hardly stop
a Eood
ir it
at
avers
selection
conformation
pended upon
ong
layer
«1 fowl
rat
wit}
mi<wirele
fowl] such as Is r
CRE tiem has
#1 and
riine
prod ne
a
y
ong
Farmers
FOR
consider
APPLES
had
OF Wih« ifa
to
the
1 have
hogs I
ori
hard
begin to drop +
Then
waste ral
butter, 1 foe
and
Sever
oCCurs
t
Pick up
r apple
ali the frail
fattening 1
gov to be quite
thrive and 40 well
herefore, advise
as thoroughls
fruit from his
understand why
fruit rot instead
thelr The
hogs high qu
¥ prized
tion consuming wast
Ereatl many injurious
root over the gro
stirred, which Is
the trees —W. H. Underwoo
Indiana Farmer
Alife
high
en il
SV
AR DOASID
hard
many
ore
to
hogs
is of very
on pia
POT
our own
io
0 8 ow
and and keeg
very
FARM NOTES
Do all the weeding
row and horse hoe, and thers
not be any need of scratching with
the hand hoe,
The average farmer does not
enough and at the right time 1
cure the best results.
A good horse and wagon,
clothes, clean packages and
manners naturally go with a
retall trade In farm products
The gscaree products are really
better than some of the common ones:
but it pays better to raise
public feels a big demand
ever it cannot easily got
Cash both ways, fs the rule
one Is a better trader than most,
Credit is one of the thing; it is
often better to give than to receive.
Judging by the prices of high grade
with the har
will
spray
Oo pro-
neat
polite
choice
for what
unless
horse, the more money,
The “Reds” seem to be giving the
“Rocks” and “Dots” a clos: race for
poultry popularity.
The Maine potato growers agree
that three essentials are sod land,
plenty of fertilizer and clean cultiva.
tion.
If the plant breeders would give us
an aMalfa as hardy as grass they will
have earned their salaries many years
in advance.
A horse that is to be used for driv.
ing or riding should carry no more
extra flesh than is essential to plump
muscles, and it should have sufficient
exercise each day to harden its mus-
cles and give it good wind,
VENTILATION FOR POULTRY.
Most farmers keep thelr barns,
stables and poultry houses open In
the summer time, yet bere and there
we find exceptions, These excep
tions oceur where the farmer thinks
that a window open here and there
is enough. Sometimes the sarel
farmer has put screens on his wine
tures as possible to reduce the num:
In summer the doors and windows
ber that have to be sereened.
The same ventilation that
weather {8 not enough in aot
weather If the animals have to be
kept in the stables. The decowipos:
‘tion of the urine in the manure goos
on much more rapidly in warm we’
| than in cold and ‘his
| makes cold air warm alr
is true carbonic pcid
iungs o he
LO oat
does ip
weather
than
the
purer
that
off from
more likely
the floor in war
cold weather, as
also
thrown
| animals is
| above
| in
| and
alr in
cannot
{ animals
moment
th.
Lhe
m weathe
it is a he
is comparatively heavier
an in winte
wide open
summer th
be 1
are
| less
than |
quite
AR
exter
cow foe the late
in
and as
da.
onthe,
ng wit
LIOTTA
: kept
tions
ia bulky
hout
t tion ]
all condi
of storage. but
thal a wi
#lore
her
Thes
such
ry lar piace
igh them
-
d through the win
food
enol of
fer months are not hol
ide, their
them spaceconsumers in
1 regard «he pumpkin ag wquiva
to silage for feed, but when we
the problem of feeding many
it much easier build a
that will hold several of
| silage than to build a receptacle for
several tons of pumpking. Moreo
ithe king must enough to
{ prevent them from decaying, the
air will get Into any receptacle in
| which they can be placed
With gilage the temperature makes
little difference if it does not reach
point where it freezes 1 have
found in the feeding of pumpking
we can feed about forty pounds
cow to advantage, and
| with some cows the milk production
i will be greatly increased. 1 have,
only
low
makes
{ age
lent
shape
round
stor
COWS is to
Ons
var
pum be cold
Foow
$5
{ the effect of feeding pumpkins was
to cause the cows to lay on fat and
decrease thelr milk production. There
are very few experiments to which
we can point relative to the value of
feoding pumpkins. In one experiment
that I have in mind there wag a gain
of six per cent. more milk when
pumpking were fed than before they
is no better .place to plant pumpkin
seeds than in the corn field. The
corn field, or a portion of it, ia just
the place for them, Seeds placed In
alternate hills of the same row of
corn will give ample room for the
growth of the vines, and they will
usually bear well. The great advant.
age about feeding pumpking is that
the man who have no silos can feed
them, and nearly all men who keep
cows had no silos.
Tas%a ner %a 0% 07a v7 sna s7e »T4 pe
WORTH QUOTING 2
AP I I HC Davee
Coa
avers
08
With 100,000,000 bushels
wheat ralged in the |
yaar than
to continue
periLy
Journal
more
nited States this
last the bid fab
their
game,
farmers
oraaer on i Ppa
boasts the filwa
Eight billion doliarg is the
hy 4
by the Baltimore American
fe
mate,
of
value of t
eight
Cans
the Crops 190%
bh
bill
are
Amer
ion reasons
should 1 opt
There
farmers
gun
sm
the al
time is coming when war
affair the brain alone,
the emotions
’
spe's will le
ly as
blow pipe
T
be
pestilence BOON lay
will
and
of not
Progressive Winnipeg.
that
largest
and
te
nn
WwW innig
manufactur
those
ist} SHOW e
“
fourth
of Canada who
gtudied the benevolen
conditions which must
future gee a repetition
of St Louis or Chicago be
fore the capital city of Manitoba
In 19502 the city of Winnipeg
population of 48411; at the
present year the official
were 118.000 in that same
years ago the total assessa
the city amounted
in 1907 had jumped
In the same space
if &0Ono
control
of
mic
her
had
a open
ing ofthe
figures
year five
ble property of
$28.615.810, and
to $106,188.00
from $188.370,000 in 1902 to $698.607,
~Coment Age
J. P. Morgan in Vienna.
i
:
Freie Vienna, J
Morgan was a busy sightseer in
city on his recent visit. With Mrs
Douglas and her daughter he visited
all the great art collections
Sunday called at Kreutzenstein castle,
Presse.” Pierpont
ess Kinsky. He was deeply interested
in what he saw in the restored cas
tle and listened with devotion when
gan” The report also speaks of Mr
Morgan's visit to the Lainzer Zoo,
where he showed the greatest interest
in the boars, “as he had never befora
seen one.”
A war document bearing the signa
ture of George Washington has been
found among the records in the Essex
County (N. J.) Courthouse.
Burma is making money out of pes
nut growing. The peanut acreage
increased from 3.800 acres in 1908
to £0008 acres in 10a
What is Pe-ru-na.
Are we claiming too much for Peruna
when wo claim it to be an effective
remedy for chronic catarrh? Have we
abundant proof that Peruns 18 in reals
ity such a catarrh remedy? Lot us seo
what the United States Disponsatory
says of the principal ing of
Peruns,
Take, for instance, the ingredient
hydrastis canadensis, or golden
The United States Dispensator
redientis
seal,
Y BLys
of this herbal remedy, that it is lar ely
employed in the treatment of depraved
mucous membranes lining
organs of the human body.
Another ingredient of Pe runs,
daiis formosa,
We
various
cory
is classed in the United
Btates Dispensatory as a tonic,
Cedron seeds is another Ingredient of
Perunz., The United States Dispe
tory says of the action 6f cedr
it is used as a bitter t
treatment of
mittent diseases
quinine.
Bend
monials of what the
runs as
LRN
1 that
mic in the
ry, and in
to us for a free
peo
8 catarrh remedy.
TANTS
¥
PAINT
IT 1%
iS
PUREWHITE LEAD
MADE 8Y
Tidy
T QUALITY
LUND
4 man s #
Capudine Cures
Indigestion Pains,
Disciplined Her,
flow's This?
ghtwadas Cured By Hypnotism
Looked Like A Football
tani ‘ : ny a has
eal { atching a
pped Mot
ment, accomplished Friday on his
thirteenth effo )
Street, of the
from the Washingt an
an
a
el-
ap-
th
wae
ert
AM, Was ted
1R85 by
1 5 b
fect not
curious
an
of
ball looked
ose il seem-
as large as
three times,
th the
ed by
increase
At the art
A Dea. As arew «
ed to the strained eye
a football Trying
Hines managed OL
ball Striking the ground in its di-
rect descent, the sphere made a dent
less than an deep New York
World
arent
sphere al
it
like
once 10
inch
REM AINS THE SAME
Well Brewed Postum Always
atable,
The flavour of Postum, when bolled
according to directions, is always the
samo-——mild, distinctive, and palata-
ble. it contains no harmful subd
stance like caffeine, the drug in
coffee, and hence may be used with
benefit at all times,
“Believing that coffee was the
cause of my torpid liver, sick head.
ache and misery in many ways)
writes an Ind lady, “I quit and
bought a package of Postum about
A year ago.
“My husband and I have been so
well pleased that we have continued
to drink Postum ever since. We like
the taste of Postum betler than
coffee, as it has always the same
pleasant flavour, while coffee changes
its taste with about every new com-
bination or blend.
“Since using Postum I have had
no more attacks of gall colie, the
heaviness has left my chest, and the
old, common, every-day headache is
a thing unknown.” “There's a Rea-
son.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Crook, Mich. Read “The Road to
Waellville,” in pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A new
. one appears from time to time, They
are genuine, true, and full of human
interest.
Pal