RUBICON. William 1 One ¢ther bitter drop to drin And then-—no more! One little pause upon And then—go Ona sigh-—and then the lib'rant morn Of perfect day, When my Will THE By Winter, the brink, o'er! free spirit, newly born, ' Il and 1 goar away One pang thrall Where grief And generous all That now he And, lucid ' shall discern What all the sages of the earth Have died to learn. I motion—and the stream is crost, dark. deep! And I shall triumph, or be lost In endless Then, onward! I shall not care! Nor Sin nor Sorrow, Can touch me there, From Putnam's ia abid Death will show me hi de 8; in that second birth, One So £0 sleep. Whatso'er my fate, Love nor Hate Magazine, UPPERS RERARS BRP RPROND ED CLOUD rE A One of the Fiercest of All Our Indian Warriors. FROM GEN.O. O. HOWARD'S “YPaA- CHIEFS IN oad SUPE MY PPE MOUS INDIAN ST. NICHOLAS, EPUPEPHPEPL PEPE PEIN PEON PND Far away in Wyo Sioux Indians, and tribe. They called then Kotas; but thelr enemies when they fought thing in a mean, 1} fen hard to know and they called them means snakell belonged a young ed very much become father was a fierce taught him Satisfied HE lived ming a fierce Wi selves said did every- | way so they Was Ww hat to Sioux, which To this tri who want His Warrior and had ke-ones. be hrave Urave to a chief. how Aves were an soon showed them and before chose him wear bonnet, nis could War At acd to give et, and they The blankets were al when this young India: lowers, each at, rode rapidly past, “See the Red Cloud.” From that time | on the young “Red Cloud,” and was never after her name. The 8i¢ a won derful feat! ival they call the | sun dance. At time all the | braves try to show how much pain they can bear without flinching, and | some say it makes them ten-| der-hearted. Certainly “Red Cloud” always could than any other warrior, and yet was fierce and warlike. In time In- | dians came to fear him, and little by | little he wag chosen war chief of all : the wiki Dakotas or Sioux. He hated white people, and when other {indians tried to make peace Red Cloud always said: “No: war, war! Perhaps he knew that just as soon as there was peace he would no! longer be a chief; at any rate, he would not listen to any plan to stop | fighting. i Fort wearing blank sald, a some one leader so far iven any ot Indians which ort gi iX aave this people bear more his heart the the Phil Kearney In Wyoming was in the middle of the Indians’ country. One day word came to the major there that a party of soldiers who had gone get firewood had been attacked, and some were killed, the rest in great danger. The ma- jer at once sent out a rescue party under Capt. Fetterman, but Red Cloud | was walting with two thousand war riors, and not one white man es caped, Nobody could say now that Red Cloud was not a great leader, and even Uncle Sam, however, he feared him, had to confess that he was “Chief of all the living Sioux In- «<ilans.” All the Sioux chiefs whose fathers had been chiefs before them were willing to give some indian lands to the white people and live | on a reservation, but Red Cloud said* "No, no: 1 want war,” and the young warriors followed him In spite of the chiefs. He had many battles and simply would not stop fighting. At last, in 1874, the Indians came to one of Uncle Sam's army posts | for a “big talk.” The result was | ‘nut the Indians agreed to give up the | 1and they had fought for, and went to live on what was called “Red | Cloud Reservation.” But still peace | did not come. They were always | ready to break out, and every once in a while houses were burned. | stages waylald, and people killed, 1t awas of no use to treat the tribe kind. fy so long as Red Cloud wanted war. fo At last; after many years, the chief began to feel that he win his fight, 80 very sadly towahawk and signed what he peace paper.’ But he did love his white brother Uncle Sam wante help him fight in angry and sent his warriors to wavy and Indian Then Uncle i that could not to be he did for und war could not he buried his called “a Fhen 18786 som Red " BB Cloud wa SCout, 3 Rex a the officers fi eX that make Tail, a chief in Red good did ways AHN to put 8 nk lace, potted honest, what ; and they and But the young and did was fra Cloud's p when loved Red Cloud sald? And he kept them from ing with their hands, and sald braves must only hunt and fight, and he would not try to keep peace to help Spotted Tail control the braves, Then last very man, vears old, he was time in his life. his lodge and be taken care he was too weak to move. began to notice how kind e was to him when he could do nc himself, and his heart was When he was able t and go out into the woods happy, and in people who re not Though until he he had despized them Uncle Sam ever that do what he work- or young Red C than the stay when loud was more at a old first in for sick for He had to of, one thing soft. ver yy 3% beg: 10 “a ha yery nis for vy weil sorry we and himself, He Was fy in ¥ body saw how to take care of “In- men; i hoe, ours, and he sald rust take land like must work with a plow a read books and study.” in north t of ns white they and they Then the must was peace the flerces a An Unnamed Country. adlans have protest. an appropriat United “Amer ion by States of They nA aig the thn have patio name i peo] themsely : proper the r take unto oO hioans Vi tion. We tuck Vv may irginians or it 2% cali ou Statesiar the title “Ams oth r Exprogs The Buffalo quotes becoming proud they they have ¢ They ever atise on w fs never oon Plain our own venlently od Dealer, Cleveland Didn't Remember. is general in of had occasion, on the thigh. satis. was amusing anecdole known French played a conspicuous charge at the This gal jant rly wounded having received a head and a bullet Such an allowance a man far from sufficient for ing general In relating the charge, which ! every dinner party, he was in he habit of throwing in half a dozen bayonet thrusts and a couple of stray | splinters from a shell, and he in variably appealed for corroboration | of his narrative to an had dden by hls side. one occasion, at the table Due de Morny, having im- more than the usual allowance Chateau Yquem, he drew a than usually startling picture of his riddled and perforated condi A cannon ball had killed his horse, a dozen sabres had deo at once on his head couple of lances had passed each of his arms, and al An a Ccav- Solfe boen part battle warrior on that sabre in his might have tastes, but the airy Revere cut left of quiet On the late '47 a to have given each other a remember it well, De Plancy, you?" he added, turning to his aide-de.camp. The well trained subaitern had suffered long In silence The bayonets, bullets, lances, ate, he had got used to by long practice, but the cannon ball was the last straw the camel's back. “No,sgeneral, 1 don’t remember it; how could you expect me to? You know as well as 1 do that the very cannon ball that Killed your horse breast plate of a culras “You and took my head off! «Tit Bits, RA MAN Not To Be Disturbed, “Body crackers? Yea'm” country storekeeper, 'leer—gend “Well” suid the “1 g0t ‘em. ‘em up to you!" replied Mrs, Medders, Tow to take ‘em with me.” “Yes'm, but, you see, Bill Bragser he's adozin’ on top o' the bar'l jes! now an’ he ain't in the best o' humor today.”"~<Philadelphia Press. THE REFORMED BRONCO. May Be Seen Any Day in the Bridle Paths of Centra! Park, New York, To the general pabite the word bronco suggests averything wild and vicious In horseflesh, One " associates the usefulness of the bronco almost { rugged West, That mal ver de- tentirely with the this wiry little ani 1 points of be recelved | vation by most persons Yet some ten ye crossbreeding, America, has what amazing on the br could e | velop the park horse much a good would with reser of in some One can Central fra Blue number more Life Ars Country this or SAYS wecomplished ult. Today of bronco re {i soe ile Park paths groomed equal with bred, and his owing. is no longer the well the iternizing an the { Grass thorough tantly gr sure, he as { 1i8 cons To be hammer-head wit as h a pronounced ewe devold flesh as a has developed fine can i neck, almost of skeleton He crest in this show as fine bred horse. His middle {tended from nor quarters has a and ntucky upbreeding neck as any Ki i“ dis- Brass plece i much eat! he as his rounds d proport his n the joined to High- into food, is £0 oosesy ype i his | pi rotot living him strikingly i horse In sists well ew flesh, 1 ie88 on 4 ; ETOWS ETABs {and the new order quite a different animal through forma. still retains the leg char Ancestry, light but and trans rather in the muscie and s der in muscles ginews dimin- has His power Jost ARMY BALLOON STATION. Headquarters at Omaha Will Cost $1,000,000. Aerial nouse Ogen EAs At a bull 11 3 the bac) jing in tha bh) will be manufactured Col WwW. A aford, command at which Glos who is In Fort investigat tha Omaha, i % " “3 vear recent ng HE ' - » Pees By loon departmen French, | lish, German A series aeroplanes i parime nt 8 i | with pons and } nder bali | hoot 1irection begun ur gireclion A SCIENTIFIC RUBE. i hs ——————— Knew More Than the Expert When it Came to Local Conditions. | “We wdbe. sitting yround the stove in" the dar the little hotel in Maine town,” an electri | saleaman In Electrical 1" Lr the HEDLS of a val Review, flickered writes the “when electric and went out “From the darkness came a solemn volce that sald ’ “Mectric lights all out, land yet It ain't blowin’ hard | Somethin's happened to the dynamo, maybe.’ “1 had been plies to tho little lig for several months, heard this particular bafore. “1 laughed long and all the more amused joined me “After they had lighted a big kero- gene lamp 1 proceeded to explain to the crowd that incandescent lamna can't be blown out by the wind. When 1 had finished, the old rube who had commented on the lights sald: “ook here, young man, if you knew a little somethin’ about local conditions and about your own busi ness. vou'd know that the wires In this township are hung up slack on the poles mn some places and that | they get to slatting in a good stiff i breeze. When they do, there's a short cirenit that puts the line out of business” Weather Sions. Tn wat or stormy weather cats will wash behind their ears, dogs scratch the ground, moles bulld their little mounds of earth, bats fly about in a restless manner and penetrate into the houses, When the skylark sings and the cock crgws earlier than usual it Is a sign that a storm Is brewing. At such a time, too, rooks and ravens utter their hoarse cries, goosh and ducks are agitated, and swallows fly low because the Insects on which they live are nearer the, earth «London Globe, b'gosk, wither gelling electrical sup ting companies but I had never idea expressed loud, and was when no one A Hungarian washing machine makes use of electrified water, COMMERCIAL GOLUNN. —————————————— Market Reports. Bradstreet's says: “Although trade reporis are some. what irregular in character, ow largely to varying weather conditions in different sections of the country and uncertainties caused by impend- ing elections, the general undertone is toward s ained improvement, trade has been comparative- because the farmers have been taking advantage of the ideal weather to complete their harvesting. However, the heavy marketing crops hag made for an increased rails way tonnage and improved collections considerably, while exports 6f wheat are heavy. Iron and steel are quiet, impending elections a deter rent influence, but production is in- in anticipation of forthcom- ing business, and there is more doing In other industrial lines. There is less industrial idleness, and in some Instances business Is developing for the first quarter of 1908, especially in shoes, lumber and pig iron failures in United yded October 8, a5 week, 182 in In 1604 exports Canada ~ pe 652 ly quiet being sing good yi or “Busine the Stateg for the number 256 192 in the wenk against 2 e like woek 1807 1906, 183 In 1905 and 1586 “Wheat, Including fic from the United States for bushels, last week a week last week 813 bus last of ur, and the week aggres 5.662 bushels bushels this against 6.477 BHT nd 5.7 Corn oxy vont are 17.759 bushels bushels Inst week hels in 7 For ended October-K th 662.052 bushels bushels in the same period 13,694 weeks are 271.224 and the i'n rn exports qr 190 Se rn against last year.' Whanlesa's Mar'iaty New York, —Flour 024 Reeeipts bs. - bbls.: exports, 065 market 1 4 flyer wheat flour WwW heat BXporis, strong elevator afloat 1 ' 1.131 Itimore.—-Flot receipts 280 bhis Firm; spot contract, 1 spot No. 2 red Western, Vg October, 1.028 Novem! ember, 1.03 2 red, a 991 bush. ; exXDOFS. Southern, on grade, Corn -Du 11; year, UATY, WO ET%; receipts, bush Southern while corn, $6; Southern yellow corn, 87 Oats n 02 er De 3 No rE 055 an 15.681 81%. @ S2% @ 67 Steady; No. 2 white, 53° No. 3 white, 52@52%; No 2 mix ed, S1@51%; receipts, 8.932 bush Rye-——Firm; No. 2 Western ex- port, 83% @ 84; receipts, 5.227 bush. Butter... 22923; {ancy i6 Firm; fancy fancy creamery, ladle, 20@ 21; @ 17. Eggs—Firm; 24 @: 25. Live imitation, 29930; store-packed, Stloes Chicago. —Cattle — Receipts, mated, about 5,000 head; market steady. Steers, 34.40@ 7.50; cows, $3.25 @ 5.25; heifers, $3 @ 4.25; bulls, $2.560@ 4.50; calves, $3.50Q 8.70; stockers and feeders, $2.600 4.65. Hogs Receipts, estimated, about 19,000 head; market strong to Seo higher, Cholce heavy shipping, $6.50 6.65; butchers,’ $6.40Q 6.65; light mixed, $5.50@ 6: choice light, $6.20@ 6.35; pecking, $5.900 6.25; pigs, $3.60@5.560; bulk of sales, $60 6.40, Sheep~—Recelpts, about 22,000 head: market for sheep steady Lambs weak. Sheep, $4.20@5; lambs. $4.76 @ 6.25; yearlings, $3.85 @>b. Pittsburg, Pa. ~~ Cattle — Supply light; sleady. Choice, $6@6.25: prime; $5.65 @ 5.90. Sheep-—8upply alr; steady: lower on lambs. Prime wethers, $4.350 4.560; culls and common, $1.50@ 2; Cr $4@6.60; veal calves, $9@ 50. Kansas City, Mo. — Cattle — Re- ctipts, R000 head, including 600 Southerns. Market steady to 10c. higher, Cholece export and dressed beef steers, $5.75@ 7; fair to good, $4.60 5.75; Western steers, $3.20 @5.05; stockers and f{eoders, $2.50 @4.75; Bouthern steers, $2900 4.10; Southern cows, $2@ 3.25: na- tive cows, $1.75@ 4. native heifers, doh bulls, $2. T0@ 4.25; calves, The United States Navy included 158 shins in 2810. estl. 3 13 ~ Jno. F. Gray & Son furedarors Y ‘0 GRANT HOOVE Ki Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Companies the World. , . .. THE BEST CHEAPES de duds in IS THE L. sins LALA a No Mutuals No Assessments 3 $4 a sefore insuring your life cont «ct of THERE in case of death and twentieth yeusrs re- premiums paid in ed dition to the face of the policy. see HOME between the which the tenth turns aii ALA 14d 1 Amann 3 to L.oam on First Mortgage Money Office in Crider’s Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA Telephone Connection ddI bbId 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Traor Manks Dceicns CorynioHTs &c., rd T ney froe » ber snd doser ar eC ommunios. 8 Patents Fring iu lenis, x receive wik « ith foush 3 a "Scienfific Fimerican, A handsomely £1] oulisti T why pleats your: § ' MUNN & Coz: at T0roatuy, Branch Ofoe ©35 strat od wes I ne swsdanlers, yi York V al bairv recy 290000040000000000000 4 : Our Latest 18 Products. 0000000000000 coon entecene Yop Bon ryy 3 r al i i 2 ii : Was n naving the ra alt "Th volun ing shake hands’ its pathol & Lr 3 ” iB AB IK a | i toaered forward can't stay and nd of I have a date to bed on the of uct but 34 Get rly, to ou're irritable at breakfast, your manners are simply unbear- At your time of life there ought to be nothing doing at all.” “This,” the father once mora, ‘is my little four-year old, the apple >f my eve. Here, Mildred, dear.” i “Go 'way,” sald Mildred, shaking her curls “You're a bounder—any man with a walstcoat like that is. Now, papa added, “don’t scold, ‘cause | have a right to say just what you and say-isn't if tangh rimary?"” ' prit waited iate ble. gald she mamma Dow in But my the man more. Two hours later by our private detective in a real estate office, signing a ten-vear lease {| for a bachelor apartment Harper's Weekly. to hear no he was seen TAMING A MOTORIST IN MAINE. A Phillips gentleman who has been passing the summer in the Dead River region relates a pat story of the cone tested rights in a highway as be- tween automobile and a wagon and their respective owners. The wagon was leisurely wending its way over a very narrow road, only wide enough in that particular section for an or dinary vehicle, and behind the horse sat a well known guide of the region. Up puffed a big auto, the driver ner- vously sounding his horn. At the first “honk honk” the guide's horse leaped into the air, nearly upsetting | the team. The auto, trailing a few yards in the rear, emitted a series of hetks which threw the horse into a fit of bronco buckings and the guide asked the man to desist tooting, say- ing he would turn out when the road widened, The tooting continued, however, much to the disgust of guide and horse. Unable to stand it longer, the guide stopped his horse, reached un- der the seat and drawing up a Win- chester and polfating it in the direc. tion of the auto, sald calmly: “I've asked you to stop . that ' noise. A gentleman would have done 80 under the conditions. Now you toot that horn again, and I'll fill your tires full of holes. 1 guess that'll widen this road enough for yon," The tooting stopped and the wagon slowly proceeded, followed by a silent auto till the roadway became wiager. ~-Maine Woods. ATTORNEYS, D. F. FORTUEY ATTORNEY AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA GQffee North of Court House —— ] » HARRISON WALKER ATTORMEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA Ro. 1% W_ High Breet All professional busines promptly ettended SRR 8D Gerro Iwo. J. Bowens W.D Zeaay (=-ETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY mt ATTORNEYB AT LAW EaoLr Brook BELLEFONTE, Pa. Bucoessom 10 Orvis, Bowes 4 Orvis Cousultation in Bags ab and German, RTI Cla ENT DALE ATTORREY AT-LaW BELLEFONTE Pa Office N. W. corner Diamond, two doors from Firei Natioual Bauk. ATTORNEY AT LAW BELLEZFORTR PA All kinds of legal business siienfed Ww promptly fpecial allen’ ion given 0 cols Uo, Sour Crider's Exchange re ociio ne N B SPANGLER ATTORNEY AT-LAW BELLEFONTE VA «il the courts sido in Ofce, Crvder's Exchange * re Fractines in Cov Fuelish ant German kntsl HELE Bld For EDWARD ROYER Location : One mile South of Centre Hell fAosommodations firstclam Good ber, Parties wishing to enjoy an evening given special stiention. Mess for such ooossions pre pared on short notice. Always prepared for the transient trade RATES : $1.00 FER DAY. TETRIS Proprietor [he ational Fate! LLEEKIM, Pa. I A BHAWVER Prop Fust clam socommodations for the travels 00d table board and sleeping &parimens The cholomst liquors at the bar. Blatle ao Sommodstions for horess is the best So bg Bad. Pus Wand irom all trains on Be Lewisbure and Tyrone Rellroad, st Coburg ER I a ——————— LIVERY 22 Effort made to NMmMo date Com avelersoae. A. BOOZER a. Penn'a RL. R, srial ~ Special 5 Accom ror~ial Te aliiidl al D. ro y 1 Centre Hall, P i! gman f Cid ‘en's Valley Ba anking g Gompz any CENTRE HALL, Pa W. B. MINULE, Receives Deposits . Cashig Discounts Notes . . . MARBLE no GRANITE H. G. STRCHTIEIER, CENTRE HALL, . . . . . PEMN Manufacturer of and Dealer In HIGH GRADE... MONUMENTAL WORK in ail kinds of Marble ao Granite, Dee no te my pros WN VD WN WIERD LHgency IN CENTRE COUNYY H, E.FENLON Agent Bellefonte, Penn’a. ¢ The Largest and Best Accident Ins. Companies Bonds of Every Descorip- tion. Plate Glass In- surance at low rates.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers