The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 26, 1909, Image 7

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    —
MUNYON'S EMINENT DOCTORS AT
YOUR SERVICE FREE.
Not a Penny to Pay For the Fullest
Medical Examination,
If you are in doubt as to the cause
of your disease mall us a postal re-
questing a medicealexaminationblank,
which you will fill out and return to
us. Our doctors will carefully diag-
noge your case, and if you can be
cured you will be told so; if you can-
not be cured you will be told so. You
are not obligated to us in any way, for
this advice is absolutely free; you are
at liberty to take our advice or not as
you see fit. Send to-day for a medl-
cal examination blank, fill out and
return to us as promptly as possible,
and our eminent doctors will dlagnose
your case thoroughly absolutely free.
Munyon's, 53d and Jefferson Sts.,
Philadelphia. Pa
Man's Inconsistency.
wo men whose officer ware on the
spcond floor were on the first floor,
waiting for an elevator. Long and
impatiently they waited.
“You're not looking
Landsel,” remarked the lawyer.
“No, Rangle,” replied the real es-
tate man. “Think I'l join an ath-
letie e¢lub I need the exercise.”
“Me, too.”
Still they waited for the elevator.
Kansas City Times.
extra well,
MUST BELIEVE IT.
Every Reader Will Concede the Truth
of This Statement,
One who suffers with backache wa
sony form of kidney trouble wants a
cure, not merely tem-
porary benefit. Rev
Maxwell S Rowland,
of Toms River, N. J.
makes a statement in
this connection that
is worth attention
Says he: "1 was sud-
denly aken with
attack of kidney
trouble, had severe
in my bark
joins and was
run down
were not
an
pains
and
generally
Doctors
helping me,
i gan using Doan 's
Kidney Pills. They brought me
prompt relief, and as | continued tak-
ing them the pains in my back disap
peared and the kidpeys were restored
to normal condition.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a LOX.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
80 | be-
Psychology Of Murder,
There an inclination
rising froma the pleasure
anything killed the
powering desire to kill. It
to pass by imperceptible
from the extreme case to the norma.
state in the following he
pleasure of killing, the overpowering
desire to kill, the pleasure of looking
on at killing, the pleasure of seeing
the blood of animal the
ure due to the representation of
jent and blood-thristy melodrama
and, lastly, the pleasure of rea
bloodthirsty novels or hearing
counts of murders, which is purel
an affair of the imagination. If the
is one psychological law fir
ly established than another,
facts and argument, t
intense representation
of an act tends to realize it
is it, he goes on, that artis
things violently never pass th
action? Because the law
subject not to en exception, but
a deviation by the creation of a wor
of art which delivers them from the
haunting idea Morbid art ia thus a
defense against abnormal tendencies
which otherwise would tend to tran
form themselves into action Mar
peing a carnivorous animal retains
the trend of idea that the blood-—in
his acts of necessity and amuseme
is the main thing-—-he must alwa
be killing something, and with many
the killing is the chief object of life
Current Literature
is gradually
f
of seeing
to most over
8ibie
gradations
order:
8 shed plea.
Vis
+105 5
AC»
more
swo-thirds of the native population
of Uganda has been wiped out by
the sleeping sickness in seven years.
THREDZ REASONS
Each With Two legs and Ten Fine
gers.
A Boston woman who is a fond
mother writes an amusing article
about her experience feeding her
boys.
Among other things she says:
“Three chubby, rosy-cheeked boys,
Bob, Jack and Dick, aged 6, 4 and 2
years respectively, are three of our
reasons for nsing and recommending
the food, Grape-Nuts, for these
youngsters have been fed on Grape-
Nuts since irfancy, and often be-
tween meals when other children
would have been given candy.
“1 gave a package of Grape-Nuts to
a neighbor whose 3-year-old child
was a weazened little thing, ill half
the time. The little tot ate the
Grape-Nuts and cream greedily, and
the mother continued the good work,
and it was not long before a truly
wonderful change manifested
in the child's face and body. The re-
sults were rematkable, even for
Grape-Nuts,
“Both husband and 1 use Grape-
healthiest boys you can find in a day's
march.”
Many mothers instead of destroy-
ing the children’s stomachs with can-
dy and cake give the youngsters a
pandful of Grape-Nuts when they are
pegging for something in the way of
The result is soon shown in
y increased health, strength
and mental activity.
“There's a Reason.”
" pook, “The Road to Wellville.”
© Hver read theabove letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
| COMMERCIAL
i
Weekly Review of Trade and
Market Reports.
R. G. Dun & Company's Weekly
Review of Trade says:
All branches of business affected
y¥ the new tariff law are rapidly ad-
justing themselves to the amended
schedules and the ending of the per-
iod of uncertainty as to the rates of
duty to be imposed has already had
the effect of stimulating trade. Re-
ports from all the important cities
in all the leading trades are most en-
couraging,
In the iron and steel trade each
week serves to bring an increased
volume of business to the mills and
labor is in greater request, Advices
from the primeipal industrial centers
indicate that working forces are be-
ing enlarged whenever possible, and
retail trade shows more activity as
pavrolls expand.
The trend toward fuller demand in
the dry goods trade has been stead)
and conservative, many retail buy-
ers being registered in the large cen-
tral markets and jobbers report a
more general call for merchandise,
Ready-to-wear and speclalty houses
are particularly busy, but piece goods
and kpit goods are in better demand
than at any time since the middle of
U5 spring jobbing season. In the
p¥mary markets on cotton goods and
varns the uncertainty of prospects in
raw cotton is still a factor in causing
delay in naming prices on late de-
livery goods.
Wholesale Markets.
New York——Wheat — Spot
No. 2 red, new. 1.10, elevator;
2 red, new, 3.10%, prompt f. o. b.
afloat: No. 1 Northern Duluth, old,
1.34% nominal f. o. b, afloat; No. 2
hard winter, new, 1.10% nominal I.
0. b. afloat.
Corn-—Spot easy;
ed, elevator
nominal; No.
shipments
Oats—Spot quiet; mixed, 26%
Ibs, 48 nominal; natural white,
I 47 $914; clipped white,
oO 1 D8,
t Creamery
4 {official price
third to first, 23
to
Easy.
No.
No. 2 old, mix-
and 78 delivered
new, 615 winter
T%
-y
32 lbs, at
¥
I
SP
common
Western factory,
Weak: State,
and nearby selected
Ffaney Her 32: YWe
Pennsylvanis
hennersy
first,
white
stern extra
yd
“iT
Pot v Alive firm;
chickens, 166 18; fowls, 16@ 16%;
turkeys, 14 Dressed steady; West
ern chickens, broilers, 14@ 20; fowls,
10k @16%
Western
Steady,
1.03% ©
Philadelphia—Wheat
contract grade August,
1 04%
Corn
local trade,
Oats
ural, 493% ¢
Butter
Western creamery,
Lv prints, 30
Eegs—Firm: good demand; Penn.
vivania and other nearby firsts, [. c.
mark: do.. current receipts, in
returnable cases, J mark, West.
orn firsts, do., cur
rent IGATR
Ch
York
fair
2 yellow for
No. 2 white nat-
asl
5 at
rece
¥
He
fr 3
full
to EO
The
easier;
market
gpot,
Baltimore-—Wheat
for Wester
1.03%; A
1.02% Prices
the opening and at
quoted at 1.04%
1.03% @ 1.04, but
was not held and
late in the day
Corn-— Western opened dull. Spot
Wc No life the market, and
market became firmer and
midday call spot was auoted
140. pri were noming!
Ouals— We quote, new oats, per bu.:
White, No. 2. 45¢.; do, No. 3, 43%
vt 44: mixed, No. 2, 41% @ 42. Old
White, No. 2, as to weight, J
i: do.., No. 3, 51@52; mixed, NO
2 50@51; do, No. 3, 49@ 50
Hay-—We quote, per ton:
timothy, large bales, $17 00: do.
amall blocks, $17.00; No. 2, as 0
location, $15.00@ 16.00; No 3.
$13.00@ 14.00; choice clover mixed,
$15.006@ 16.00; No. 1, do, $14.50@
15.00: No. 2, do. $12.50@ 14.00
Butter Creamery seperator
pound, 27% @ 28c.; imitation
pound, 22% @ 24%¢c.;
pound, 27@ 29c.; do, 1
per pound, 27@ 29¢c.; blocks, 3
pounds, per pound, 26@ 28e¢.; dairy
prints, Maryland, Pennsylvania and
Virginia, per pound, 16@ 17¢.; Vir
ginia and West Virginia, store pack-
ed, per pound, 19%ec.
Eggs — Maryland,
and nearby firsts, per dozen 23%%c.;
astern Shore, Maryland and Vir
ginia, per dozen, 23%ec.; Western
firste, per dozen, 23%c.; West Vir
ginla, per dozen, 23 %e¢.
¥ 3
in enea
ugust, 1.03; September,
firmer afler
midday spot was
and September at
the improvement
prices eased off
Ok
became
12 to
wh
al
at
ile the
the
a rices
NO, 1
per
per
prints, 15
pound, per
Chicago——Cattle— Market strong
to 10c. higher. Steers, $5.60@ 7.55;
cows, $3.560@ 5.256; heifers, $3.50@
6.60; bulls, $3.00@4.85;
$2006 8.00; stockers and feeders,
$3.75@5.15.
Hogs— Market 10@ 15¢e. higher;
| choice heavy, $7.80@7.90;
i cholee light, $7.80@ 8.00;
: packing, $7.00@ 7.40; pigs, $5.50@
6.65: bulk of sales, $7.40 @ 7.85.
Sheep-—Market for sheep steady;
@ 7.96;
$4.50@5.25; lambs, $6.75 @8.15;
yearlings, $5.00 @ 5.40,
Kansas City — Cattle — Market
| steady to 10c. lower; packers and
( feeders, 25 49 40¢c. lower than Mon-
{ day: cholee export and dressed beef
Fy $6.50@ 7.50; fair: to .
$4.60@6.256; Western steers, 4.25
| @6.35: stockers and feeders, $3.00
| @525. Southern steers, $2.25@
5.40; Southern cows, $2.45 @ 3.80;
native cows, $2.00@ 4.40; native
heifers, $2.20@ 7,00; bulls, $2.76 @
4.00; calves, $3.00@ 7.00.
Hogs— Market 10@16c. higher;
bulk of sales, $7.50@
i $7.66@17.76: packers
$7.6060 7.95,
Lop $7.75;
1. bi heavy,
| and butchers’,
Ed #
ap ns age
'Ya
AMERICA WINS
i :
WAT tpig
a,
Ler fit ir
20
Bobert Carter, in w York World
Pekin, i Ameriean
pation in the Hankow ar
railroad loan was sre
offices of the Forelg
P. Fletcher, the ierican
d’'Affaires, and Liang Tus
dent of the boa
increased $25
066,000, American
to get h. the
going to Britis Frencl
interests
Americans
China
he
}
wl
1 Board
at
Henry
Charge
pre i
he
by
ioan is to
500 0G0 to
on
have equal op-
portunities mat for
both the Sze-Chuen and the Canton
lineg and bra they will i
subordinate en and they
have also one-half all future loans
of the Sgze-Chuen Railroad and its
branches, with corresponding advan-
tages
The details of this settlement will
3
to supply erial
ned ow 5 4% nt
Chess; appoint
of
Willard D
tive of the
Straight, the
American financiers
protest lodged by Mr. Fletcher against
the completion of the loan with Brit.
ish, French and interests
alone wi we withdrawn
representa.
"1 German
Ht and an edict
FIGHT ON
will be
ing
This
Americal
donned
igsued authorizing the ur
i the onl
has bes
Washingt
tal
are in the Hz:
received he with
fon The s«
1 KOwW
tiement
a victory for the State
: vi Department,
which has insisted on the fulfiiment
of the promise to Minister
in 1804 he State Depart
has fought successfully the align
of the European group w hich so
to ex it. Its wict depart
officials AUR well for 3t-
ure, as the diss i Pekin in
dicate that American tal will
on an eguality with {«
the
!
ger
»
ry
say the
from
car
placed
fre
money ir ys
noney {1 empl
Rien
¢ summation of he poliey
open door in China, so steadfas
gin
pas f
- ss ———
Legal
are
administering
tax law have
tention of
law in the
tutionality., but
have not
courts
the
been able f+
of attack They
will stand the test, #
lance on :
drawn by able lawyer
safegu
the Sunreme Court
ing the right of C
corporation for carrying
ness
Preaident Taft called §t-
ance in the work of putting his ideas
into writtenlanguage Secretary Knox
Attorney-General Wickersham and
Senator Root, all of whom ad-
mitted to be able lawyers, while the
President himself is not without a
reputation for legal ability
It has been suggested that one
point of attack would be that the law
i . who carefulls
it by adhering strictly to
ion vhoid-
OnEress ia &
on a
rded
decis ug
to
to his assi
are
nding.
1 5
office
priated $150.04
ury Departm
cial foree for the « 3 inn
The officers
: bureau exnress
sum will not 1
i next session f Cor ¢ will be asked
make an addillonal appr fation
{ The tax is 10 be paid on the earnings
' of corporations the ralendar vear
ending December 31 Returns must
| be made before March 1, 1910, and
payment be made before June 20. or
i heavy penalties will be imposed,
Treas-
a spe-
the tax.
revenue
of
of the prnal
the o that
sufficient. and
ion this
the
gree
to ODI
ir
THEM.
London The first shipment of
Peninsular and
believed
be the last The
Orient Steamship Company
that the carcasses could be
in large quantities in
ships, and that the trade might prove
a competitor with frozen beef and
mutton
The carcasses sold well in the
wholesale market, but the retailers
find that the public will not have it.
Some 5000 hogs were brought over
on a trial shipment and placed on
| gale at the shops for the first time
{at twenty-five per cent. below the
prices charged for other imported
hogs,
But the public prejudice, even in
| the poorer classes, was £0 pronounced
{ that the butchers bad in most cases
| to raise the price of other pork. such
{as American and FEuropean, before
i they were able to sell it.
PASSING.
Paris. Concluding a series of im-
pressions of America which he gained
during a recent visit to that country,
Guglielmo Ferrero, the Italian his-
movement is essentially a struggle
between the old traditions of the
Puritan democracy and civilization,
The rapidity of development,
lightning changes in customs and the
creation of a multiplicity of new
needs. he says. eat up the Jarge earn-
ings of the people, who are living bet-
ter than the Europeans,
Signor Ferrero believes that while
the anti-plutocratic movement is a
triumph in some directions, it is des-
tined to fail in others.
“ipdustrialism.” says Signor Fer.
rero In concluding, “seems to be de-
stroying a part of the old-time Amer-
fea of Franklin and Washington and
creating America less American
than that of the past. When and
where this destruction will cease
no ons can say.”
Mutes in Census Work-—-Secretary
Uses Them to Operate Machines.
Washington, D. C.— Believing that
deaf and dumb mutes will make good
operators for the puncturing and tab-
nlating machines to be used in mak-
{ng up the returns of the next census
Secretary Nagel, of the Department o
Commerce and Labor, is inclined to
.appoint them to such positions if ea-
pable ones apply for the places. This
work requires great care in its per-
formance, fer the reason that there is
no way to obtain a check on the re-
sult,
Mint at Denver Robbed—Employe
Los Angeles, Cal.—Charged with
mitted against the Government-—that
mint at Denver, Col, was arrested
here. Dakin is said to have sold gold
to local dealers in small jots. The
employe allowed the melted product
to splash on to his clothing while at
work in the mint, and then scraped
it off ang kept it for his own use and
i
i
PAINT BEAUTY
Assnred of durability the
thought in painting is beuuty
complete aim being durable beauty,
or beautiful durabilify.
National Lead Company here again
offer you the go-operation their
paint experts-—this time in line
of color sciemes, artistic, harmonious
and appropriate You have only
write National Lead Company,
Trinity Building, New York City,
*Houseowners' Painting Outfit
49." and you wi promptly receive
what ig really a complete gnide
painting, including book of
schemes for either exterior or interio
painting (as you 7v
book of specifications, an
striument for detect]
in paint materials
free, and,
worth writing for.
nest
of
the
tC
14
i
to
i"
g adulters
‘his outfit is se
to the is weil
EAYy least,
record of
le whale was
time
bone yield
wu, 100 pounds
worth
was nearly
Human
the same
yea¥ he
» age of 1
being of
Fate a8 he af
would be
oO
68 fect
ing like it for the red
-
A full grow, cat
while a dog has 42
has 30
ro AV ifie woliing rup for Childs
vihing, softens the gue, reduces intiag
wits, lla ng ITae Wil ica butlie
The
until
bamboo
its
tree
thirtieth
does not bloom
year
For COLDS ana UKIP
Hick's CAPONE i858 the best remeOy—
feiiryes Lhe Boling iki fev i “%
the Cold and restores mal condi a It's
tenia eects he. sot
C.. sidrug store
no no
that kind
onvivial ev
Wants Her Hand, Too,
A
And that young
lps? Why
hand’ sald the
didn’t have
ing
Slatesman
WORTH
MOUNTAINS
OF GOLD
During Change of Life,
says Mrs. Chas. Barclay
Vi ‘I was pas
wlChangeof Lifeand
_ from nerve
3 anc ner an?
sympl
can truly say tha
Lydia. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com
pound has proved
worth mountains
of gold to me, as it
restored my health
and stre nit h
never forget 1
my friends
: LydiaE Pink
Vegetable Compound has done for m
during this trying pe Compiet
restoration to health
to me that for the sake of other suffer
man
didn’t
kissed
to paps
hes gd fO ask
Yonkers
Graniteville,
through t!
‘
ial
Fain.
trouble public so you may publish
this letter.” — Mmns, CHAS. BARCLAY,
R.F.D.. Graniteville, Vt
No other medicine for woman's ills
has received such widespread and un
qualified endorsement. No other med
feine we know of has such a record
of cures of female ills as has Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
For more than 20 years it has been
curing female complaints such as
A Substitute For Work.
“Physical culture, father, is pet
exclaimed an enthusi-
ustic young miss just home from coi-
“look! To develop the arms
} grasp the rod by one end and wove
it lowly from right to left.”
“Well, well!” exclaimed her fathe
“what won't science discover
if that rod had straw at the
Bue-~
er.
next!
other end you'd be sweeping.’
Cent
And She
Laly-—1 wish
my hat
Photo Artist
sitting in it, If
there is plenty
Hits,
Him
to bx
Froze With a Stare,
taken standing
in
taken
snare
ratea
You can be
you line, I am
of room iiust
of Increase in
that rall-
and the Bronx
passengers
rate
ats ad
tan
the
SOO n OQ
For fEVADACY IRE
\ 4
leh AVEPBINE
H+ we
This Trade-mark
Eliminates All
Uncertainty
in the purchase mm
Ea materials
ft is an abode
. guarautoe of pus
= ity and
28 For your own
—F bre | sew
!
that it is
quadity
fteciion
of the ¢ it
every keg of white lead
¥ uy
RATIONAL LEAD COMPANY
$07 Traily Seating Rew Tork
- - a —
TICURA
MORI
FOR LITTLE
FAT FOLKS
Most grateful and comforting is
1 bath with Cuticura Soap
This pure, sweet, econom-
ura
ment brings immediate
ical treat
relief and refreshing sleep to skin-
tortured disfigured little ones
and rest to tired, fretted mothers.
For eczemas, rashes, itchings,
irritations and chafings, Cuticura
Soap and Cuticura Ointment are
oy
worth their weight in gold.
vaghout the world, Depots: Landon, 27,
§ Paris, 5. Rue de la Prix, Agra.
] " india, B K asl,
ripn, 144 . :
frre, Lenson, Lad. Oape Then, ote; ©
Bo » HA
otter Drug & Chem. (
- Sole Props. Boston
PAYS for our FULLY, BOOK KEEP-
ING COURSE SCHOLARSHIP If
you write within 5 davs and state
where you saw this ad Regalar
price Is B00. Boo s and Station ry
free. 1f not ready pow, write and ave one re.
served and we will let you pay when yon ene
ter. Can also teach you hy mall if you prefer.
periodic pains, backache, indigestion
and nervous prostration, and it is
unequalled for earrying women safely
through the period of change of life
as Mrs. Barclaysays,it is “worth moun
tains of gold ” to suffering women.
®
Laxative
acts on the bowels just as some
foods act. Cascarets thus &id
*he bowels just as Nature would.
Harsh cathartics act like pepper
in the nostrils. Soon the bowels
grow so callovsed that one must
Vestpocket box, 10 centa—at drugstores,
Rach tablet of the genuine is marked C CC
on
tds Collige
POANOKE, WR.
Otters double wR advantages of Othe aehvoole, Then
gant anew Halk , mew turaitare an a
large Taouily - ahonnd bene ern tan
tor praduntes, seaion hm Sepl. fst. Write
Tor tree Prospectus. Address MM. COULTER,
President, Roanoke. Va, Drawer 767.
Psat yous
PEA
I PD fme te
ler your
Tonae Mares, DOprTignt FoR’ Books A lows, Me
tres, Sha, New aol as 50 Bodnly te sol lees
Frog-dppeerritrg Bes Ry bipriy ie
fave id,
and wast 1000 A -
Law, Nolary
Webb agen, BL
SROPSY
Fhe pustuykRY
nb
Pink Eye, Eolzootic
Fever.
ow horses al wre
Liguid, given on ath] aod