The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 14, 1909, Image 6

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    Man Who Shot Officer Caught.
Lancaster. —Albert Langer, who
shot Constable Andrew M. Keesey,
in this city, while the latter wac tak-|
ing him police headquarters, was |
arrested home in New York, |
Local police officials located Langer s
Courtlandt Street, New |
Metropolitan authorities
Langer has a long rd
LO
at uis
home at 715
York
¥
ne
tata
Bilal t
that record
as a thug |
River Front Unsanitary.
State Health
petitioned by
Health to send a
mine the un-
1
oMm- |
the ,
Wilkes-Barre,
was
Board of
i i to Xa
onditions existing ¢
inna River fro
retary McAndrew claims
ion is unhealthful and
must be done to over-
y
gixon
in
Life,
iis Teti, Jr.,
from death
Charles
» *
OV Ss
Sin
wi
was setting
apron
as envelope i
en nis
il
Teti's danger
burned
and extinguisiaea
Teti's clothing
His
oeing
Car Fender Saves Child.
y Veronica Minnick
ar of Mr
K, was returning
her mother when
by a
as
in advance
was caught
car was stopped
ha
1
troiley
ran
of her
}
oy
she
+
he little one
bruises,
Saves Brother, Killed Hers if.
Corr} Truly a heroine
Dental Examiners.
iar:
State
I Governor
slowing
of tl
art
Williamep #
Girls
John I
an {
surer of Lycomir
d by
i
a
¥ $3
found
ie in
for
for
Fix Shamokin's Status,
Shamokin Notices were po
thorized Judge C
ge. to deride whether to
to a third-el
To
here, at by
Savid
1 a borough lass
Injured In Runaway.
Dr
wae
mare he recent
became
The anim:
dashed the
horse
Williamsport
of Wa
Kents
ed when
ran
buggy
post
Milnor house
found physician
a farmhouse into which
ville,
AWay
and
When
a:
the
searchers r
the unconscious
¥
carried,
Jobs,
Twelve
n'oved
rated by
Mining C
Firemen Save
Shamokin
and
Colliery,
Rallroad ane
gaved from a prolonge]
by work fire
venting the mammoth
ture from. burni down
from a locomotive fznited it
engineer of another train
ed the blaze and sounded an
hundred
y — *
boys © y at
herole of
or
ng
Appointed Census Supervisor.
Easton Harry G. Selp, of
city, has been appointed census
pervisor of the Seventh District
Pennsylvania
this
#1
of
Fireman Willed.
O11 City George C. Mack, ass
ant foreman of the St. Mary's Fire
Department, who had been attending
the State Firemen’s convention here,
was instantly killed while attempt.
ing to mount a heavy automobil®
truck. The vehicle was loaded with
firemen. Mack tried to Join them,
but fell under the wheels, i
Treat Tooth Free,
Altoona. —The Central Pennsyl-
vania Dental Society, In session here,
decided to esriablish clinics where
people who are too poor to pay will
have their teeth treated free of
charge. The clinie will be opened
in Altoona as soon as the prelimi-
paries can be arranged.
stricken At Desk, 1
Pottsville. — Stricken at his desk
fn the auditing department of the
aged 60 years, one of the best known
coal officials in the anthracite region,
cosslvely with the Lehigh
Company, the Crystal Run
and some years ago also did opera-
ting on his own account. He also
was a prominent church worker and
gunday School superintendent.
Alexander Burlew
Lewistown Alexander Burlew, 77
old, died after an illness of
weeks Mr. Burlew was consld-
an authority on iron ore and
the early days of the
goection of the State,
twice and Is fa~-
children, thirteen
survive him
Dies,
5iX
ered
the
woenteen
Mine Afirve,
Hazletor
1
a0
shaft colliery
of
ompany
which was
1 manway
the Coal (
was
thor.
the City was
firemen
{0
em-
get he
Drops Dead.
Reading Adam
known reside
Fire le.
Destroys Trest
The 1
No Water For Reservoir,
Pottaville ©
Fire DesHoys Cars,
Doyles! freight
and a
in
the
loaded
oal cars
near
ative 1
LOVE in
own Two
ity
burned
the
here
fire to the wr
ckage
ht and
fralo
ire
with wheat
was in one
loaded
is about $5
wae
Reading Teacher Resigns,
Read Prof. Charles F
t 1 the garmmar grade at
! resigned to
1ip of the pub-
Northumber-
Seidel,
county,
:
fon,
Second Story.
While suffering
sholia, Joseph G. Miller
effort to end his life by
om a second-story window of his
home He sustained an injury to the
spine and Internal hurts which may
result in his death, since he is in a
critical condition
Jumps From
leading from
3 made
leaping
Rock Beats Boy,
York In a race to the bottom
of a twenty-foot bank, a heavy rock
weighing about thirty pounds, which
he had loosened, outstripped H-year-
old Willlam Spangler of West Locust
Street, and the boy received a dozen
severe cuts about the face and head.
“When I woke up the rock was atl
the bottom. I think it beat me
there.” sald Willlam to his father
vhen found after the accident.
we
Nrothers Face Death,
Mahanoy City. Returning to
their breast to investigate a slow shot
at Draper Colliery, Gilberton, Joseph
Zoba was killed, his brother John
suffered fatal injuries and a third
vietim was seriously hurt, The men
reached the breast just as the ex-
plosion occurred, and were badly
mangled.
———————
Lancaster.—The heavily armed
man who shot Constable Andrew M.
him into custody for selling liquor
on the streets, was identified as Jack
Langer, who has spent at least half
his fe in jails at Kansas City, Jo-
Het, Baltimore and Harrisburg. He
weeks ago
selling
The house in which he was living
here was surrounded by a baavily
armed posse of officers,
IT HAS
art
ELECTRICAL SHOCKS Ti
BEG
5 i » Te § 1 1 ¥
: Will Be Forced to
New York City. Lewis
shipbuilder, graduate of the United
States Naval Academy and for several
years one of the chief construct
the American navy, flouts the
that the airship In any of
will become a formidable
chine,
Instead, Mr. Niton bel
the death-dealing terror «
the future will be the electric
This conclusion has reed
upon his judgment by a careful study
of the subject of new w
and by closely watching the 1»
vres of the Wright
galled up the Hudeon and «
representatives of the world
est navies,
In Mr. Nixon's
can guard against the daz
plosives that might be drop;
them by airships by
pared He believe it
that sooner or later there will be per-
fected a gun or some other piece of
mechanism for hurling a bolt
that will shock to death eve
aboard a warship, Irrespecti
protection
“1 am convinced,” said
a reporter, “that the t
ne now, but the
™~ that the thunds =
npulse, would kill ths
it. as
f tt}
’
been f
ar agencies
aeropla
opinion
sSnec)
3
armor
thnndar
ry
ve of
release
it is possible, 1
reign nation already
fected the necessary ma
which to hurl this 4
hope, however, that it
done. When the princi
ered the result will make war so h
ribly destructive that the human ra
throug the sheer foree
first self-preservation
well
of eours
gome f
nw
abolish war
“The aeroplane is main'y
ing now on account of
what may grow from it
shall see them like rwars
locusts fying over and bevy
to occupy nrozitions and
communieations
“For purposes cf oheervyat!
will be of great wee, T helicn
owing to its smallerdimens
best adapted to such nses
to be carried on men-of-war
“Insofar ag | ran see, the
which will combine mune?
aeroplane fs now proving
ghip of the future,
“Count Zeppelinhasalready crosred
the fart of
Possibly we
Ee]
eh
International Peace.
i the ni
| again
of wes
Inve snd
Alps and
§ BOOT
way that
WAY or
be
may
the mil
i
Mr
me ag to .
on tinned
onliinueq
re of
a tre.
in
1900 1
derbolts
1Aange
aon thu
The significance
shed about a year
iving a shock which
nearly nroved fatal while talking over
n wi i was not then
would be possi
to shock to
vessel at five
impulse
njected at any one mark,
be thrown
of a news item publ
aro of a man recs
reloge told ane
fealty nnnraris :
y ag ecinted it
hie nat
nt day
on a
r
!
$ Be " a
fain i mm
¢. but so far the
miles 4! he
anaot be pr
Hut direction and aiming will be mas.
tered after a while, and then
derbolts will be thrown just as shells
yw.’
\
I
are thrown ne
thune-
STARVING ESKIMO
St. John's, N. F.——Tragedy in the
fey wastes of the Far North formed
the burdea of the news brought to
this port by the Hudson Pav Com-
pany's steamer Adventure, which ar-
rived with the erew of the lost Dun
dee whaler Paradox, in the
an Eskimo, driven to cannibalism by
several neighborswho attempted sum.
mary punishment,
The Parador, one of the fleet of
companion ship, the Snowdrop, which
was erunched in the merciless jaws of
the ice floes off Baffin Land early in
August a year ago.
mainland and were picked up by the
SLAYS HIS CHILD.
Hudson Bay Company's steamer Pell.
can, which took them to Fort Church.
| §11, where they remained until the ar.
| rival of the Adventure on her regular
| fall trip. The Adventure also brought
goveral missionaries, surveyors and
nrospectors from the Northwest coun
| Ary
The Adventure’s report of the can-
nibalism says the Eskimo’s fishing
| and hunting season had been a fall
and. driven mad by hunger, he
cut the throat of one of his children
| and then ate the little victim. When
the man's neighbors learned of the
crime they attacked him, according
to the primitive law of their race. The
outcast beat off all assaults, shot sev.
eral of the pttacking party and es
"eaped into the wilderness of ice.
{ ure
PITTSBURG.
Pittshurg. -- The Pittsburg Clvie
of the most important and high priced
trio of experts to be had in the coun-
| try for the purpose of giving advice
on Pittaborg's bad street car system,
her river front and on plans for lay-
jng out the $500,000 park which
Frick has given the city of Pittsburg
throuzh his daughter Helen. Those
"who have been employed to come at a
| Arnold. of Chicago; James R. Free-
man, of Providence, and Frederick
| Law Olmstead, of Boston.
Mr. Arnold, who ia an expert on
| street railways, will do his best to
| figure out a way in which the trans-
portation facilities of Pittsburg ean
be bettered. It is conceded that the
street car service Is about the worst
in the country. Mr. Freeman is the
hydranlic engineer whom President
Taft is said to have paid $500 daily
for making the trip to Panama, and
he will take up the matter of Pitts
burg's water frontage and suggest
wavs and means of raving the city
millions yearly lost throngh the piv.
ers’ overflow, Mr, Olmstead will tell
the people of Pittsburg how they can
best beantify the park land given
them by Frick. It is understood that
Mr. Carnegie and Mr. Frick share
equally the $800 a day paid to this
trio of experts,
Nearly All Animals in Canadian
Buffalo Herd Escape,
Calzary, Alberta, -— Word was
| brought here by a man named Ed-
| wards that the Canadian buffalo park
| at Wainwright, Alberta, had heen de.
! stroyed by the prairie fire which has
| been burning in that section,
| As the fire burned the fence sur.
| rounding the parks the herds of buf.
falo, estimated at 800 animals, and a
large herd of elk escaped. Many of
the animals were killed.
The fires caused a financial loss
that will run into millions.
Coal and Coke Advancing:
Roads Short of Cars,
Baltimore, Md. For the first time
ginece the early part of 1907 the rail
roads entering Baltimore, especially
those having a large coal tonnage, are
face to face with a car famine. The
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad began
distributing coal cars on the percent.
age basis, In West Virginia scarcity
of ears Is more pronounced,
Practically avery mine in Maryland
and West Virginia is being operated
to the capacity of the railroads. Prices
of coal and coke are rising.
BOOK ACCOUNT USBEFUL
sount of the feeds
lerived from them
try and to stock, he will
vineced he has been
the best money-maker on farm
Many labor under the impression that
It requires on,
m 1ke
argument
but
and the amounts
when fed to poul-
that
the
too much attent
ht and stud
out of poultry.
have held
present
LO
much thoug
ZOO
time
ed
Aro,
$
2 cord
take a
k's neck:
r knees so
string and
aver in its
1
OTK
tongue: draw its mgue out
the
Tas SP
ie RETaRs
into
Et sithin
nossible
Your
and
wn
in
14: windpipe,
then the ae
remove it with a
ant the chick
and keep it comfortably warm
twist your b “until
far down as you think it ought
and twist it as it comes out
nd will almost be sure to get
he gape This way of
aking the gape worm out if any
one has a better way 1 be thank.
ful to know it-—Mrs. A G. in the
indiana Farmer
de as
const twist give some
water
Never ine grass
& as
0 £0
you
worm iz my
and
will
1O0TS PROFITABLE
sucressful hand
is jooked upon
the
SMALL
The
on unlimited range
more profitable than
fowls on the village
fowl
the net
quently much greater
with limited area than
Excellent results slong
ity lines have been and are
tained upon limited areas
the line standard-bred
high merit and an abundance in
yield, many smalldot poultry
are obtaining a surprising percentage
of profit on capital invested in t
enterprise. The average person
apt to think that not much can
done on a poultry plant limited
two or three lots. but with a well
bred flock of fowls of great produc
tivity. and with properly located
buildings and yards, the small
try keeper, If possessed of ability,
has many opportunities to obtain
splendid results in market sales and
in good thoroughbred breeding stock
—Indianapolis News
ling of fowls
as
keeping of
or city lot
profit per is not infre
for the man
%
for the othe
strictly util
at
in
o!
being
while
of fowls
eR
keepers
heir
is
a
be
to
poul
FEEDING FOR EGGS
We feed our fowls as early as pos
gible in the morning. Their break.
fast always consists of a mixture of
grains, and it may be made up of
wheat, oats, rye, barley, buckwheat,
Not so
very much is fed, and it is all thrown
eut clover, or any other equally
loose material, Dinner is fed in the
sists of a few handfuls of oats to
By feeding grain scat
the birds are compelled to take plen.
contented nearly all day scratching
and hunting in the litter.
A mash {8 fed in the evening. nt
is composed of two parts each of
cracked corn and wheat bran, and
one part each of middlings and
ground beet scrap. The fowls are
given about all of this mash that
vant to
last them much
meal, It
the afternoon to
ple time in
the food and
iit is time
Clean
slightly
Moh
has to
oth-
enough in
birds am-
of all
belore
roost
heen
to
three
eat, as supper
longer than any
is fed oarly
allow the
which
water they want
to partake
for them to zo to
fresh water
warmed
the
a1 it
of
a day r each
1 toy that
already
i water is
: entirely
A head
fed to each
sunflower see
ff already
increased
ration is
nereased deman
feather-making materi
when imably
be in need of protein to fi
gen for the gre
the system pres
irnish nitro
wth of f« and
the
thers
ofl available heat for
protected bods
to supply
Farmers’
Journal
NOTES
the
on
be
In
fowls
should
to
such as
what free range
an ke
an
green k
in alfalfa meal at a mo
and fresh water, meat
Plenty exercise is
which
supplied der
ate
and grit
sential
Cleanliness is
Cost, meal
of es
important.
1s
it
disastrous to the profitable
well-bred fowls,
accumulate in the
Convenient build
{0 save
utilize al! of the available space
assist the poultryman patly in
respect :
in
hen is
ne of a few
to
buildings
arranged
1
labor
En
limited quarters
an important
a drone to
individua'
not
nal
luable
the
fact
ir: do
occupy ]
permit va
space,
Many would-be fanciers longing for
the pleasure of indulging in the keep
ng of a flew wellbred fowls, are
lost every season because they have
not the courage to begin on a limited
space. There are, moreover, many
men who really need such work for
the recreation that a venture of this
kind would afford them
The small breeder with three or
‘our birds of some puredred variety
an ultimately develop into a promin-
ent fancier if he will but persevere
n a systematic course of breeding till
this position is attained.
The trap nest and the numbered leg
hand enable a breeder to keep an ac
curate account of the performances
of his fowls,
The California law requiring all
sold storage eggs to be so labeled is
ittracting attention and will likely be
op'ed by other States.
Stock up your incubators when
eggs are cheap and thus have a
hatch or two of chickens coming om
for the time when both eggs and
chickens are high.
Women are better fitted than men
‘no care for farm poultry and should
have supreme control, but with the
assistance of men to do the hard
work.
The poultry raiser for ‘the market
makes a mistake to feed his cockerels
during the winter. Selling them on
the first rise in fall prices is a more
profitabls plan.