The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 12, 1908, Image 7

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    & ih
an. oo Ye Pm A - -
A HUNDRED YEARS FROM NOW.
Fhere’s a pletuwre in the window
Of a MHttle- shop I know,
With boys and girls dressed as they
were
A hundred years ago.
And keep on thinking how
I'he children, maybe, will be dressed
A hundred years from now.
Or hoops in grand array?
Will they wear bows lke butterflies,
Just as they do today?
Wil boys wear jackets short, or tie
Their hair in queues? Just how
A hundred years from now.
What do you think the girls and boys
Will eat In those far days?
Will they be fad on breakfast foods
In many sorts of ways?
Will the good and tasty things
Be worse for them than rice?
Will ice-cream soda make them sick,
And everything that's nice?
. 11
au
Will children’s books have
then,
Or just all
pictures
reading be?
Perhaps they'll be hand-painted and
Most beautiful to see,
But when I think of
I truly don't see how
They can be any prettier
A hundred years from now.
-—Sarah Noble-Ives in St. Nicholas.
FRAG 5 PS 2525528 25252525250
Their Mountain 2
Visitors
By Franklin Welles Calkins
TATA TA TA TATATAY
with such
le confidence—by
my the
wuntain home
a boundary,
confidences
their visitors cs
Crawfords, in
near the Chi-
friends,
tephen Crawford
gar plantation
—in southern Louisiana, where he lis
ed until malarial fevers reduce
to littl than a
iis phys ordered h
and a brother
cattle-ranch
was able to furnish
domicile at just the
ed His abandoned and
ranch, girt chaparral-grown ar
royos and backed by ledges of painted
rock, the Mexican
village of
Crawford's
consisting
had owned
a su-
-bought after the
le more skeleton.
ician
Southwest,
Owned a
Grande
who had
Rio
the
near the
just
altitude need-
roomy log
by
stood overlooking
Oraibe.
Mr family small,
of a grown daughter, Eu-
nice, two little girls, Essie and Pearl,
and an old of Su-
extraction, known as Aunt
was
domestic, pure
iver,
Eunice, the housekeeper, found
Lew quarters spacious enough except
’r lack of bedroom managed
0 overcome this difficulty, however.
¥ two
She
+
by having partitions put up in
furnishing
which
ned into the bunk-room.
the bedroom the
:
b
a large bunk-room, and by
n storage-room,
ined and ope
This became
little girls.
It had no window except a square
ole the back, where the logs
ad been sawed, well up toward the
gable, and through which it receiv-
ed some light and ventilation. Plan-
ning to have windows in this roam
a8 soon as sash and lights could
secured, Eunice covered the opening
with mosquito-netting, which was
quite covering enough at any season
in that climate. The door from Ker
own apartment opened into that of
the children, and thus she was able
to keep thelr room aired.
Some months passed, and the frosts
of November camo to the mountains.
giving the nights and mornings a
chill which is felt by all cutdoor crea-
tures in that latitude.
Thus it was that Eunice and her
father had no particular surpriss when
Essie and Pearl complained that “O18
Guy” had come in at thelr window
and insisted upon sleeping on their
bed.
Old Guy was a deaf and superan-
nuated” hound. A kennel had* been
fashi ned cutside for him, since he
had been a privileged member of
the family. As the outer end of the
Hitle girls’ apartment abutted agzains®
some high rocks, there was nothing
but the mosquito-bar to prevent his
jumping into their room. And as the
mosquito-netting was found to have
been torn away, the story told by the
children was confirmed.
A cold wind had blown all night,
making the
inside, and the little girls complained
that Oid Guy bad geratched the bed.
outside ad.
for
at
be
himself.
“And he jammed his old cold nose
right Into my face,” sald Essie, “and
her.”
Mr. Crawford laughed. “Old Guy
mustn't plague my little girls that
way,” he sald. “You must call to
sour sister; and, Eunice, keep your
riding-whip in. your room, and if you
catch the hound In there give him
a few cuts and drive him out, and
he won't go In again.
That day the invalid, who was al
ready on the way to recovery, drove
to Oraibe; but as the road was long
and rough, his strength did not per-
mit him 'o return that night, as he
Fad planned.
Eunice, expecting her father ‘¢
come me, sat up until nearly m'd-
night, in order to prepare a warm
supper for him upon his arrival, Sie
HE
big!
i
os og BE ag fl
uf . is
room, : ay
At about eleven o'clock, as fhe sat.
writing, she heard a gcratohing sound
from the children's room, followed
by a muffled jar, as if some crea-
ture had leaped upon the floor,
Eure lstened In silence until
heard the volce of little Pearl
gleepy, whimpering oomplaint.
dears!” thought the elder
“That od nulsance of a Guy
to be punished for
them 80." She rose soft.
her rawhide riding-whip,
ntending, tender-hearted though she
to flick the c¢ld hound harl
enough to make him remember,
She heard a repetition of the scratch.
ng and again that muffied
thud upon the floor, and in the same
again the sleepy, haif-
wall of little Pearl. A
to her very heart as the
upon her. There
creatures of some sort in
Old Guy had been on
0
‘Foor
sister,
servea
bothering
ly and got
sounds,
smothercd
struck
situation dawned
were wild
the roon.
not
and Dears
and any
from
used
antain-leons
the hills,
in easily
rocks, might long have
room for thelr lair! How
Pow criminally careless she had been,
to leave that opening unbarred!
In the of f-condemnation,
agony
did not stop to consider that
Lynxes,
among
coming
m
the
that
them,
8¢
9
open windows
Whil Eunice
whether or not to go
gun and arouse Aunt Silver
Guy, a third smothered wail appealed
to her. She hesitated no longer, but
tarew the door open and stepped in-
J
to the room
month month
uncertain
father's
and Old
after
stood,
o
for her
'
She held her lamp above her head,
and sight, no longer
which met her eyes was
unexpected,
certainly hor-
rifving. Near the center of the room
led beast, its head
res reflecting her
bared a of
dee; immediate.
in hiss
wned
rons chest
jeep mutter
intruder
terrifying aig]
ETOW |—uin-
of warn.
another crea-
upreared
BHOY
pon
the
1. -
sort it.
and
0
ne
BAG
oused
mmches, this « gave
gruff outcries which re
he coughing
yent to
of
t grunts
he
he relief of Eunice,
scr nin tha =
cupled the front of
: x
and scudded
le Pearl,
id by
out
But its Hie
tilts, was
beast upon her bed,
wailed
n< one fore
and
innocent piteoun
that she st
or and irresolute,
that big,
tigers
nice rognized
Té
cats
these mot-
i
jaguars
doubt
ted
Mexican
had
were
The
s%
or
beasts without
had
ong-vacant
1eir winter lair in the
accesnihic
nights had
Their nat.
casily
storage-room, and the ¢
and
them back to It
prey was abundant in the moun.
and there had no
attack the sleeping children
they had been angered,
and Punice dared not an instant
leave the crying child to their mercy
She knew that wild animals
fearful and she trusted
lamp in her hand to
jaguars at bav.
Pearl.” she
ed, sternly, “and sister will
old dog away!”
Holding her lamp to the front and
with whip drawn to strike, she ap-
proached the beast upon the bed. Her
caution might have been greater had
she known what Mexicans could have
told her, that the jaguar iz frequent-
Iy fascinated by a moving light. and
ill as often follow one as retreat
from it.
The animal
riven
ural 1
been incen-
now
for
most
are and
of
the
fro
fire,
much to
koop 2}
Keep he
command
drive that
HC tnt wreitye
<=L0D orying
did not Indeed change
its position as she drew nearer, but
rather increased the violence of its
grunting roars Its great red maw
and formidable fangs would certain.
Iy have frightened away a less reso
lute girl.
As she came up to the bed, Eunice
set her teeth and struck the jaguar
a vicious cut upon its jaws. hie ani
mal, roaring with pain and anger,
shrank against the wall, but retreat.
ed no farther, and its fore paw still
held the little girl
of the flercer sort are tenacious of
foothold in their lairs
Eunice now leaned
plied her whip with the practised
hand of a horsewoman. Her stinging
cuts were aimed at the animal's eves.
Flesh and blood could not long en-
dure such punishment, and presently,
with a horse whine, the jaguar leap
Eunice snatched the crying child
from under its quilts and backed
i
i
run out behind her.
Despite her retreat, the jaguars
would now have leaped outside, but
i
them. Their Increasing uproar had
the old
hound. The negress had fled from
the house and climbed upon a moun.
tain cart, where she now stood,
shrieking Ineoherently. Just as En.
niece reached the door Guy thrust
his muzzle in at the opposite open
ing. The hound stood with his hind
feet upon the rocks outside, and see.
ing the jaguars, gave tongue In a
deafening clamor,
The faguars, beset on all sides with
strange creatures and stranger nolses,
‘apparently became as thomoughly
frightened as before they had been
angry and formidable. Such instances
of their terror at a really slight
cause are not infrequent In hunters’
ya
9
——————————————
Sunde - panded, fascinated, In the
doorway to watch the strange antics
The jaguars
had thrown themselves upon the floor
in the center of thé room, where,
bewildered by the bedlam of noises
and the light, they rolled ‘and writh-
ed and bounce, spitting and snarling,
and apparently trying to face all
ways at once.
What wivh the wallings of Aunt
Silver, the bellowing of the hound and
the cries of the children, who imagin-
el that Eunice was being eaten, there
was noise enough to have thrown a
menagerie of wild beasts into terror
and confusion.
Eunice watched the jaguars for
some seconds, noting their fear, and
debatinz how best to get rid of them;
and then, with resolution taken, she
stepped back and closed the door upon
them. For a brief time busied
Essie and Pearl;
safely within
she
ske locked them
peating carbine and returned.
a chalr to the door, set
lamp upon it, opened the door,
and pushed her light forward so as
to Hluminate most of the space with-
the storeroom,
At first she could see nothing
the jazuwars, but thelr snarling volces
hiding Both,
the howlings of the
Silver, had taken
old-fashioned
upon
She drew
their place,
by
Aunt
intimidated
hound and
where they lay flattened
floor
secure
or
g
the
common
gat up
steadiness
be
hed
tho
felt ut
rowled oo
warning,
cals
and
in
in
hissed, spat
but only
of
down the doorsill
One
Eunice on
hain of aim.
the
Eunice
jaguar
under
this
could
yf
SHOT
soen
fortunately the
by
the shot, the other
ie cover and leaped to a far cor
m Then, while the
encouragement, the
and fired at the
beast until the
of the ro
hound bellowed
aimed
snarling
brave girl
¥
bouncing,
carbine
a hasty
wr door upon the danger
Old
CArCaASEes of
smoke of her
Then she
locked
until
worrying at the
did she realize that victory
and
Not
Guay
beat retreat
heard toothless
sho
faguars
was hers,
Mr. Crawford
whe n ha
a
father
The
six
proud
Oraibe
with
was a
returned from
skins of the
t.ho Ge
rand in
Companion.
ed at nls h
Youth's
GOOD HORSEMANSHIP,
Meant By “Hands"—The
Sloan Racing Seat,
heart and head
hands and your
down,
knees keep close to your horse's
What Is
Your
Your
your keep up,
heels keep
Your
sides,
And your elbows to your own,
This old bit of advice for the would.
| be horseman fs quoted by a writer
in Bally's Magazine and Jeciared lo
be perennially sound
He quotes another
the of what
divine gift of hands” in riding. This
old hunter, John Darby, used to at
tach two pleces of twine to the back
of an ordinary chair and draw the
same tighter until
on its fore hind
ito his own position,
old hunter on
subject he calls “the
or legs, according
it, s0 fo speak, on the swing by
gently manipulating the twine or reins
be held in his hand. A rough pull
of not
al
one way, whereas the fact
checking in its movements at
would have caused a total loss
! control over it in the opposite direc
' tion.
“And that” when the exhibition
was concluded, he would add “is
hands, gentiemen.”™
Jogging to the covert, continues the
it
its owner fully equipped throwing its
dle: another sweating profusely al
{ miles an hour since it loft the stable,
and a third snorting and prancing
about all over the place.
Why is this so?
the rider of neither of them is pos
He also pays his respects to the
| hideous American monkey on a %tiok
i seat and sarcastically demands why,
{if it really Is such an advantage in
racing, those in authority do not piace
a penalty of, say, £7 on each rider
adopting it to encourage others to
still ride as horsemen with an equal
chance of success? How our grand
sires would laugh if they could only
take a look at our illustrated sport
ing newspapers of today.
“The riders they would compare, 1
fancy, to the monkeys and the horses
as substitutes for the dogs they rode
round a sawdust ring in a steeple
chase performance in the days of
their youth at some travelling cir
cus of country fair,
“The old paintings by artists of an
earlier day, depleting steeploachasers
and racers extended like rocking
horses, are charming to gaze upon
as a ‘pick me up’ after shuddering
at contortionists on the backs of snap
shotted horses limping along with
in the other”
RB ARG WAN §
There was a period in English his
tory when juvenile smoking was en
forced officially, The diarist learn,
in writing of the plague of Loudon, |
in 1685, says: “Even children we
obliged to smoak.”
5
COMMERCIAL COLUMN
Trada and Lates!
Market Reports.
Wren man
of Trade says:
“Decided improvement is noted ‘n
fally in respect to
partmonts. Orders
manufacturers more freely, in many
by requests
carly
distributive
have come
cases accompanied
immediate very
Evidences
are numerous
firmly held where
been offered recently
tracting
resumed
sufficient
or
on increased
and prices are
CONCLERIONS
without
mills
after months of idleness,
orders having accumulated
capacity during the
year, and a
hat contra« be
thi
have
at-
$1
buyers. any
active
the
weilef t
freely during
of
$
there is
ts will
next
balance
months.
“Recent
of
moderate reductions
3
pig iron ana
material hases
confined
dur
quires for
longer
deliveries
f 19086 1
Pure are
10 immediate
the first
ged, and
be taken
current
are be
Ne
Arran
ould
would name
rails
needs,
quarter © ing
if producers
Orders for
for both
some
enough
while
for rece
Minor m
firmer because of a decidedly
810]
aX.
hav-
re
1@ and
plants
to
idle
business
nists
plate
account,
secured
operations,
inl
material
port
broad-
Wholesale Markets
New York, —- Wheat — Receipts,
1.05 ele-
b. afloat;
1.133% I.
1.10
No. 2 red,
1.10 f. O.
Duluth,
2 hird winter,
steady,
No. 2 red,
Northern
afloat; No.
b. afloat,
Corn—Receipts, 12,900 bush, Spot
No. 2. 77% new elevator
and 77% f. o. b. afloat; No. 2, 84
spot for old Option market was
without transactions, closin
Oats— Receipts, 83,400 bush.; ex-
2.505 bush. Spot steady;
B2@ 52%; nat-
a.
8) ie +
ports,
white, 26 to 31 lbs, 50@
67%.
Poultry-——Alive i
chickens, 13;
dressed steady;
1905 18%
ie ’
turkeys, 10
Western
14;
n spring
12@ 14;
sak;
fowls, 13; turkeys
Wester
fowls,
i 16
Receipts,
Pennsyivania,
fancy selected white,
fair to choice, 336 4
mixed, ney, do.
a2 Western
spring
Eggs — Firm,
Crates State,
7.0406
and
43 @
o .
=
45; do.,
brown and
fair to
firsts, 26@ 27;
Philadelphia, —Wheat
unchanged.
Corn—Dull.
for local trade,
Oats—Steady;
ural, 53@ 53
Butier—Firm;
28;
{a 33
choice, 29432:
“9 ©
seconds, 236 25.
Dull and
%e lower; No. 2,
£3% @ S4c
No. 2 white, nat-
Le.
Western
prints,
extra
do., near-by
and
© Gr
&3C.,
Cggs—Firm: Petnsvivania
other near-by firsts, free cases,
at mark: do. current receipts, in re-
turnable cases, 28c. at mark; West
ern firsts, free cascs, 29. at mark;
do., current receipts, free cases, 28,
at mark.
Cheese-—Quiet; New York
creams, choice, 13%ec., do.
full
fair to
Poultry-—Alive, firm; fowls, 11@Q
old roosters, 8@ S3%c.; spring
10% @ 11%; ducks, 10%
11%.
Baltimore. —Flour— Dull
Receipts, 9,826;
and un-
exports,
2,351.
Wheat-—Steady. Spot,
1.02% @1.02% ; spot, No. 2 West-
1.04% @1.05; October, 1.02%
November, 102% @
1.02% ; December, 1.03% ; steamer,
No. 2 red, 993 @ 99%; Southern,
Receipts,
contract,
35.248.
Corn—Firm; year, 667% @ 66%;
660; exports, 700.
Oats—Steadler; No. 2 white, 520
52%: No. 3 white, 51@51%: No.
Receipts, 14,-
Rye—Nominal; No. 2 Western ex-
port, 82@ 82% ; receipts, 25.786.
Butter—8teady; fancy imitation
creamery, 22@ 23; fancy creamery,
29@ 30; fancy ladle, 20@ 21; store
packed, 164017.
Eggs Steady: 274 28
Cheese—Quiet; new large, 13%;
new flats, 13% new small, 14.
Live Steck,
New York.~Beeves—Receipts, 1,
141; mo trading: feeling steady.
Calves — Receipts, 241. Veals
steady; no trading in Western calves;
feeling weak. Veals sold at 5.00 @
$.25 per 100 pounds; grassers and
fed calves, 3.25@ 4.00.
Sheep and Lambs—Recelipts, 3.«
771. Sheep unchanged; lambs slow,
but steady. Sheep sold at 3.50 i»
8.70 per 100 pounds: eylls at 2.09
to 2.25; lambs at 5.25 to 6.15, and
culls at 3.50.
Hogs—Receipts, 3,179; feeling
steady. New York State and Penn.
sylvan‘a hogs, 5.9¢@ 6.00 per 100
pounds.
Cattle — Receipts entl
mated about 8,000; market steady to
strong: steers 4.408 7.680; cows,
3.00@5.00; heifers, 2.50@5.25;
bulls, 2.50@ 4.50; oalves,
.
H Receipts estimated about
30,000; market 5@ 10c. lower,
Cholee heavy shipping, 6.00 6.20;
butchers, B95C 610 °
Sheep—Receipts estimated about
20,000; . Fret bi 10 3 20s, jowert
een, . 2.00: lam .
00; yearlings, 3.85 @ 5.15.
_
gq
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(Bax Hobvi
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No Mutuals
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. -
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dition to the face of the policy,
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MUNN & Co.
Frapch Offica a5 V
VOYAGE DOWN THE RIVER.
The first thing that I can remem-
ber is that a boy had me in his hand
and that he, with a jackknife, fash-
joned me a little sail of birch bark.
He then took me and put me in the
water and made me go wherever he
wanted me, by means of a stick.
The waves as they went frolicking
by called to me to come and play with
them. I tried to run after them, but
every time the stick brought back.
I tried again and again to go after
; them, but the old stick still kept me
Finally a great hand reached out
after me and picked me ug
. B0I4 by al
1 Broadway,
FR. Vash
me
But I
heard a dear little wave call, “Come,
| come play with me, and we'll
have some fun,” and it called in such
a plaintive way that I could not
gist; 80 1 fell out of the hand
went down the river with the
before the stick could catch me
The wave a bit of spray
over my deck, and said “1 am aw-
fully glad you came with me; where
flo you wish to go?” 1 said, as the
wind puffed my sail “1 don't
care where I go, as long as I am wit}
you." “Thank you,” said the wave,
as she lifted me lightly over a pebble.
| “1 do hope I'm going fast enough for
you.”
“Oh, yes,” 1 sald.
“Well, I'm going
: sald.
“Oh, don't,” 1 managed to say.
The wave went on with me, but it
and
ree
and
wave
d
dash
up
faster still,” {it
wave had to go slow, also.
| Now the chip had time
{ about it.
what it saw:
to
| pered to the brook and to me.
i to another:
: goes sailing by.
| a sall like that.
be!”
The scenery was beautiful.
| sat a family of frogs. “Croak, croak,”
| cried the father.
| the little chip boat that sails by us,
| Look at her little sall. See—"
| and I heard no more.
| brook nodded they pretty heads to
{ me as I sailed by them; the grasses
| that hung over the water brushed
. my sall gently, and the wind fanned
| ly me with his breath, that smelled
Jweetly of fresh wild flowers.
We now came to some stones and 9
little girl in a pink dress was going
across the brook with a basket in her
hand. When she saw me she cried:
*Oh, what a pretty little boat!” and
the reached out after me, lost het
footing and fell into the water. There
was a big gurgle that came from the
basket, and a liquid poured out of it
The water at once became discolored
{ I bumped into an eggshell, turned
| around twice and then sailed on. |)
Jever saw anything more of the little
girl.
A beautiful dragon-fly eame and
took a sail on me. It had the love
llest wings that I ever saw. They
were of a beautiful blue tinge, and
sh! they were sdlight and gauzy. He
ealled along with me for quite a little
while and then flow away.
My wave carried me along for quite
a little way further, and then he
gently sald “Goodby,” pushed me inte
a gentle eddy and wag gone.
I sailed around and around for a
long, long while, and then the eddy
shot me into a little harbor between
two rocks, where the water was very
smooth and the bottom was very
sandy, so now I am content to listen |
to the gentle whisperings of the
leaves of a large maple tree above
And I do feel go happy that T—a
chip boat—could be carricd down a
river and come to such a nice resting
piste as this at last.-—Mary Esther
|
TIER
——
wa
oy
ATTORNEYS,
- Cr
| D. ¥ vorruzy
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
BELLEFONTE, PA
Ofos North of Court House
|
SEI
bi § HARRISON WALKER
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
BELLEPONTR PA
Ko. 1% W. High Street
| All professions! business promptiy sttended ta
' 8D. Gerrio
=
Sr
—— Re RRR a
Iwo. J. Bowes W.D. Zeany
ETTIG, BCWER & ZERBY
ATTORNEYS AT-LAW
Escrr Broox
BELLEFONTE, PA,
Buccessors to Orvis, Bowen 4 Orvis
Consultation in Englah end German.
re ——————
ALES .
C LUENT DALE
ATTORKEY AT Law
BELLEFONTE Pa.
Office N. W. corner Diamond, two doors from
Fire: Nations) Bank. jr
W G RUNKLE
ATTORNEY AT-LAW
BELLEFONTE Pa
All Kinds of legal busines stended to promptly
Fpeciai siten lou gives Ww collections Office,
oor Crider's Exchasgs =.
KR B. BPAKGLER
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
BELLEFORTR FA
fonenitatios
Ofce, Orider's Exchasg
iro
Frectioes in si! the
English snd German
courts
) ROYER, Proprietor
Loostion : One mile Bouth of Centre Hall
dorommodstions fmtclems. Good bar. Parties
wishing to enjoy au evening given special
attention. Meals for such oocasions pre
pared on short notice. Always prepared
for the transient trade.
BATES 1: $1.00 'ER DAY.
lhe Aational
MILLHEIM, PA.
L A FHAWVER, Prop
First clam soccommodstions for the travels
Good table board sud sleeping &partmeny
The sholosst liquom at the bar. Biable ae
commodations for horses is the best to be
bad. Bur and from all trains on the
lewisburs and Tyrone Railroad, at Cobure
SITS ———
LIVERY 2
Special Effort made tu
Accommodate Com
mercial Travelers.
D. A. BOOZER
Penn's Valley Banking Company
CENTRE HALL, Pa
W. B. MINGLE, Cashi¢
Receives Deposits .
Discounts Notes . , .
H. GQ. STRCHIEIER,
CENTRE MALL, . . . . .
Manufacturer of
and Dealer In
HIGH GRADE ...
MONUMENTAL WORM
In ail kinds of
Marble as
Granite, Pot ai wen mr pre.
PEA
H, E. FENLON
Agent
Bellefonte, Penn'a.
The Largest and Best
Accident Ins. Companies
Bonds of Every Descrip-
tion. Plate Glass In-
surance al low rates.