The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 28, 1909, Image 6

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    Car Hits Funeral Cab,
Norristown.—A trolley
ed inte a funeral cab, injuring four
persons, one seriously The injured
were all mourners from Frankford,
Philadelphia, who came here to at-|
tend the funeral of Allen Martin
They were Mrs, Martin Dover,
Rebecea Reigler, Mrs. Clara
and Reuben Dean Mrs. Dover
injured internally, has a braken
and an injured back and mouth,
condition is critical Mrs Reiger
has a bruised and contused hip
accident occured while the
cortege was on the way to the ceme-
tery, Jeffersonville. The fourth
sing Marshall Street
ine, when the trolley ca
bound for Conshohocken, came dow
Marshall Street. The conductor tried
to get through the procession. There
was a crash and the cab was
turned and the horses thrown [he
driver of the cab, David Pollock, was
thrown from his seat, but landed on
his feet uninjured. When the cab was
struck, it' frightened the horses ol
the ead following, but the driver pre
vented a serious runaway The cab
was wedged against the trolley car,
which had to be moved before the
jured could be taken from the wreck
Assistant Secretary Miller, of the
Y. M. C. A., assisted in the rescue of
work. * The cab was badly wrecked,
and another vehicle was secured to
take the injured from the scene 10
the house of ing The motor-
man, H. BE. eacaped injury
Mr. Martin i from the
home of his Mrs Baker,
1034 Cherry
car crash-
wa
. ATL
was cro on
Haws Ave:
"
a
nour:
Dotts,
was burie
daughter,
Street,
Swept By Fire.
Le
origin pra tically
fness section of
town twenty-eight
here The fire originated in
building occupied by
a gent store ros
com ated with
buil
BLOT
James
eral fl
occu pi
Fire of incendiar
wiped out the
Mapleton, a i
wistown.
miles west Of
Leon
IN
mn
Coal Valuations,
After ses
i > 8 1: YOY
North
Sunbn
cCOnLroy
sioners
and
Savidge and
yn the appeal i
from the trienni
7-08-09, handed
the valuation he
County coal tracts
248,625 The triennial assessment
1504-05-06 fixed the valuat
in the county
at
assessmen
Court
pe
Of
fon fixing
umberland
os :
160 Wn
the North-
at £4 -
of
of 100
the coal lands
ation purposes
the triennial
09 the valuation as made by
sessors and as revised by the
Commissioners, sitting as a
of Revision, was $11,130,557
increases between ia fast
ment and that of the form
marked that a number
were made.
1807-08
the as
Couat)
Boar
Girl Threatened.
Mauch Chunk.
fng the life of
of Eckley,
father, Andre I :
place The missive was dat
enried and said: ''l have
until Wednesday to get
ley. If she is not out she will
wooden overcoat by this
Thoroughly alarmed, the
brought the daughter home
fs the second threatening letter
eeived., The first predicted death
her if she went on a visit to Upper
Lehigh. Suspicions rest on a ceria
young man and the post-office autho y
fties investigat!
18
st
On
are
Whirled To His Death.
Shamokin Oliver
echinist at Bear Valley colliery, waa
walking a plank suspended above a
larze fiv-wheel of an engine when he
became dazed, lost his balaice
fell against the fast revolving engine
wheel and was whirled to death.
Sheets, ma
» 4 1!
ana
Thrown From Carriage.
Collegeville~-Dr. M. Y. Weber, of |
BEvanshurg, had a narrow escape
from death when he was thrown
from his carriage and landed oa the
hard pike as his horse frightened at
a steam roller, The accideat hap!
pened on the Germantown Pike,
near Providence Square about 9
o'clock.
Killed Bear.
Lewistown. —-Raymond
16-year old boy of Maitland,
shot and killed a large black bear 0:1 |
Shade Mountains with ordinary |
squirrel shot. Yeatter and several
boy companions carried the bear to
his home, a distance of several miles
The animal dressed 282 pounds,
Yeatter, a |
Pa.,|
Mad Dog Shot.
Lancaster. —An epidemic of rabies
among the dogs of Manheim broke
out afresh. A valuable hunting dog
belonging to Trabert Hershey sud-
denly went mad after running sev.
eral miles, bit dogs belonging to H
8, Weidman, Garfleld Hershey and
others. It attacked a young son of
Amog Witman and was shot by the
boy's father, who had been attracted
his son's screams, Strict quaran.
is now being observed in Man-
io ‘and vicinity,
The
Day
saston. -
Founders’
in Pardee Hall,
made by B FPF
Dr. Trueblood's
annual Lafayette
exercises were held
the address being
Trueblood, LL. D.
subject was ‘''The
of The Hague Peace Con-
He dwelt upon the im-
this movement to the
today, showing the
immense interest that was being
manifested in it throughout Ameri-
ca and predicting that war
stitution would before long become a
thing of the past,
ference.”
portance
of
Money For Library.
Coatesville (Special).
of the Coatesville
raise
the
The
High
money
teach-
to pur-
ute of the stu.
without a li-
and aside from the small
brary in the Coatesville Y. M. C
there is no library in the town,
teachers, under the direction
Prof. Smith, the principal! of
school, have started out to
needed
to
rary for
school
chase &
dents.
bgary
is
A
The
the
Veteran Hero Dies,
Huntingdon. — Captain
Gayton, Mount "Union, Hunting
don County's oldest Mason, died in
bis 82nd year, and on the fifty-sixth
anniversary of his marriage He was
Ry of the 1tY-8eCo! Penn-
Cavalry the Rebel
his da capture of the
Rebel General after a five
mile race, w thrilling in
5 Of the
5
William
of
{ vd
ania
and ring
Cai
as one
iion,
“tor
of t he
War,
+
At ( ‘ontesy ille.
ners
the
Circus Stock
of this
fact that
warded from
and Wild
ering of the
Winter
oO!
Coatesville I'l
Rion are jublian ver
iF
ontract
the
fie spending
and around
were late
he farmers
] quartered
where
Hacks
Indicted Men
His Back Broken,
Hanover.—-The first
I fatal street
cide
over occurred
a drayman
in a peculiar
vas backed
horse sad
ar® auproach
ceeded in get
but in
the back
ng death
track
Cal m in
rif “"ey 3 ori
iJ ing AUST
fe
hit him In
fi :
§
Offers
Foler
Harvey Md
Wedding Sapper.
oft Tuatice of the
who as vet
f performing a mar-
on record ase
elaborate
first counle
have the
widition to hie
wat all the girls
Foleroft are
to hethink
Morrison
indncement to
along
Peace
has not
WTisor
onor o
an
try
EY
inire’
arents Steet Sewing
Dart The members of
1 Teacher Association, of
which was recent organized,
irated its first work when a
in fewing was started All
fifth grade are oli-
the sewing
Wednes-
in sew.
members, The
the second
every month
Clans,
the Par-
above the
h : mt erhin Tw
Bich will meet every
afternoon Innate
ig given hy
1 sof
tion
fhe
oointion wi
gay evenl
on
ne of
Robber,
H. W. Miller,
con nducts fi grocery store In the
end of the city. found a thief
bark of the counter and
while ealling for
threw her violent.
refricorator and got
i1land fusnt
the store
Woman Urappies With
¥ TT
i Wis
roschine
ave +
help
3
ten
The
agninat a
badly br
entered
battle,
fellow
away
tomer
Find Valuable
Shamokin
Coal Veins,
In tunneling from the
deep shaft at the Philadelphia and
mding Coal and Iron
ry, workmen tapped three veins
of coal which the company thoupht
could never be reached. It is ex-
pected the supply will last for twon-
ty vears.
Benjamin Apple Gets Plum,
Sunbury. -
District, com-
Northumbériand, Sullivan,
Columbia and Montour Counties.
Lancaster. Isaac 8. Snowden, of
Oxford, Chester County,
been attending court here, was found
dead in bed at a local hotel, He wag
79% years old
William K, Seltzer,
Lancaster. Willian K. Seltzer,
one of the best known men in the
county, died at Ephrata, ed 65
venrs He was a veteran of the Civil
War, was prominent in Republican
nolitics, and stood high In the Luth-
eran Church and Masonic circles.
i — Cu
Foot In Fork Rrenks Fall,
Willlameport. Clarence Bricker,
of South Willlamsnort, owes his 1i/e
to the fortunate catohing of one fom
he wae plunging,
FASHIONS ARE RETURNING,
Curious as it may seem, the pre-
dominating influences at work among
the now styles are those borrowed
from the fashions of the eighteen
sevonties and eighties, says Mrs
Dolineator
because there could
hardly be an uglier, more {impossi-
elghtien You
the
hips, the
underskirts and the foolish
of fringe and
row<hested basques,
scant
bits
boad-
of
in those unenlightened days.
Yet with all their flagrant diere
fur
for some
fishwife
they have
basis
The
tunic,
restraint and beauty
nished us with the
really lovely things
skirt and the laveuss
were truly terrible when hips were
huge and walsts were wasplike, are
positively charming in nation
tho present silhouette. The
overskirt is caught up across the
front and allowed to trall
toward the back quite as it
do 30 years ago. The
is generally plaited, but
the formidable array of
plaits that gsed to light
of our mothers and grandmothers
content ourselves with a simple I!
ed skirt that falls in straight, flat
lines around the feet
I saw a great many «
side with the underskirt
terial and the fishwile
other. They are
the semidressy
toilet that can be
sons without a wrap
ful-looking style,
have
combi
of
orzan-pipe
*
"
thi aye
instead
do
wo
in the other
of one
O81
trotton
worn
and on
ines to
Abroad they are
in bufeline incther na
in a now
is known as Alma
filette and
tunic,
being
cord diayos
crepe,
retroussee
really a
the gowns
the plain
matorial
blanket
ed in
welcome
of the ue
Darrow
has rather
on wi men
eliminating
A
failure
period of
the
the «©
lose
siding
$583
dang
i+
AON,
a many
dire discas
rey
and
this
band and fe
financial crisis
a time of stringency.
rifice, with no exit ma
by the teloseope of
It means a reconstru
home regime on si
is a reclassifying o
penses. and many of the
quietly romoveq fr
and many of the old
nromoted to the luxury ¢
cing arises from a mere scl
dignity of an
has to work overtime
threo
wile
it in
om
noceaseit!
Onee to
do ie
and do the duty
art, BYETy
Chafing restrictiens fake
of the old freedom, Wants
pudent and insistent,
mosphere fille the home
uation requiring slow, careful
fulness, as that of a sen
standing on the bridge of
gteamer and directing the
progress of his ship under slow
through a heavy fog
There is danger of
recrimination, protest
pathy mn the part of
by a tendency coldness,
bitterness, anger, hoo ¢ 5 .
sarcasm or despair on the side of the
husband. When conditions are dark
est the lamp of love should be kept
burning brightest _ This is an occa
gion where the two should pull to
gether. Yom eatiot move and guide
a boat properly with one car: it re
quires the twn on opposite sides to
move in harmon: Delincator
of
the place
grow il
and #1 new
it ja a
watrh
captain
an ovean
annildl
Fendt ine Hlame
nd lack of sym
the wife, met
{o CTOSENess.,
snlks,
THE CHARMING WOMEN
One must be unconscious of self
in order to be considered charming
Rule entitled
must be good, be
or she cannot
ie a Ick of
saversd ner.
haps not in the course nf a few vis
where there
There is a difference m the trie
and the false ring of a co'n. Think
not to deceive It is impossible. All
exert an influence for Food or avil
wpon those they come in contact with
Why not let it be th fermer? It
is much the happier way. A pleas
ant impression never works harm to
tong as the memory of tho person
A charming woman takes a broad
view of life. She eannot be narrow
She wounds not her friends with un
kind words. If she chides, it is with
a gentle manner,
To deserve to be called a charm
ing woman, one must be charming
to women as well as to men, other
wire the charm would be a very one
sided thing, #0 to speak. It is easy
to charm a man in many cages, not
80 oafy A Woman.
Iz there a woman go unfortunate
ns not be charming to someone?
~Now | ven Ruginer
i
}
BRAVE ON HORBEBACK.
of the best horsewomen
and it was her skill
the aaddle which
of a dramatie
A heavy
her when
mountains, and
was unable to
and she stuck
is one
Europe,
poerve in
her out
broug i
c'tuation
thunderstorm over.
she was 1.d'ng io the
animal
gaddle in the
f out, but the
sirzight for
twenty feet
theew hers if {rom
saddle and land24 with slight
on her hands and knees, Lhe
went and was dashed to
in a fall several hundred
The Princess is the favorite
of King Edward of Eugiand
was the daughter of the Duke
of SaxeCoburg, who gave his
English title of Duke of Edinburgh
become a German subject The
geent bottles and
talent
eon
fac
pull up the
the
jtae
Princess
0
rua
took the
When only
Ise
the
injury
over
of
feet
She
Ty
up
vinagrettes She also has a
business, as she personally
the largest quill toothpick
in the world —New York Press.
WHY SHE SHOOK HIM
She had met the young man
country on a farm and
a liking to him When
he called her
to dine,
shook
tory
in the
taxKen
10
her
he came
on and took
whereupon she
much to su
who had heard ©
terms of such
heard the chimes of
town
Out promptiy
him, the ri
her friends,
of him In
they almost
WAding
»
er
that
the
eyralan
Dried
} i
Mines ©
we
PISODE
When {ra lellamy was ting
King was
Appar
tent as
al
to
she
most
hich the
ried out, “Oh. thou
the King-—and
th sah murdered
herself on his
of Convent
resent amon idience
otly the play
the wine hig
TW
Yr
as
majesty had taken
’
fell asieen, Sreatly
# annoyance, for
sa box and
riley of
with a
Vigent exe
admitted of,
vO
part
falap lord ™
thus like
ang re
Fe
Thealre
art! woke
Mache
voenged
Annals
goed
Rie]
Garden
THE BENGLISH
Mre Harding,
don court against
had beon 2
Ta
HUSBAND.
testifying in a Lon
her son, sald he
to Yar since hia
said, “a hus
froated me
Times
brute
fact.” she
fio: have
sas (
hovhood
conld
Ka
band
Worse, tity
FAAHION NOTES
Sleeves ae tight-fitting only
the wrist
Figured
ularity
Slender iris still
charming empire style
As coats grow longer, skirts,
gome reason, grow shorter
New Parts gowns show a revival of
the puff ut the sleeve elbow,
There seams to be a revival of
colored lungs for sheer gowns.
Heavy corded moire is a material
that will be much seen this season.
Spotted foularg is being used for
the lining of motor eoats.
New models are expected to show
all kinds ef plaiting and shirrings.
Rongaline and moire promise to he
great favorites in costuming.
The
now definite and an accepted edict
of fashion.
An innovation of the season ig the
wee of mousseline tuching to finish
silk gowns,
Gloves re to be in black, tan, white
and gray and no other colors.
The reappearance of the flounced
dress is one of the novelties of the
moment.
Foulards will figure generously in
the making of house dresses.
(‘loaks of the moment are very
much om the same lines as those of
fifty years ARO.
Plalted skirts made with yoke ef
tect will be popular, in some models
the yoke extends only across the
hi
Pine of the fancies is a black hat
trimmed with a wreath of green, ao
companied by a feather boa of font
nge green shade.
now
at
goods snow signs of pop
sling to the
for
III
5 sas
Poultr
PRESERVING EGGS.
There is not the least doubt but
that the water-gluss method of pro.
serving eggs is the best and most
successful method known to man,
aside from cold storage, which is
not practicable with the ordinary fel
low who wishes to preserve only a
few hundred eggs, or even a few
thousand. The waterglass method
has been thoroughly tested vari
ous periment stations most
satisfactory results, and bids fair
to become the univer method of
preserving eggs in quantities.
It is cheap, simple successful
Water glass (or silicate)
can be at drug
not
by
with
it
sal
small
and
sodium
almost
ur druggist
hand he
are seve
and
i fa
it 1s
obtained
or if wi
have it on
it. Ther
ter glags,
0508
any
store, does
can easily get
grades of wa
preserving pur-
that a good
secured The cost
over 50 cents per zallon
is nothing better than
t
6 put t
i PUL
ral
CRB
essential
for
not be
There a
iarge
using the
JAr
with
water
thoro
To
been bol
mh
’
hot water quarts of
that ha;
tan
led and cooled
glas 28
plac a,
vaporation
are
into
water
dark cCOv-
the solu-
the
over three dav
clean. An egg
|
i
|
AA EE RENT]
Yj mT
pert burglars visited the stable at
2 o'clock, and after cutting all the
electric and telephone wires, they
had Mr. Hertog's best team on the
barn floor and were hitching the ani
mals to a8 wagon waded with harness
when half a dozen guinea hens set
ep a cackle, for which this fowl is
famous. The din awoke not only the
household, but the neighbors for sev.
blocks. The burglars,
ly badly frightened, fled
thelr booty.
eral apparent.
leaving all
———
EVENTIVE DOCTORING.
time to doctor a sick fowl
the fowl gets sick, and
to do
lice,
PR
The
before
is
the
way thiz is to keep them
from
qu arters «
free
feed judiciously
the
ilated
pienty
and use
the most healthy
in the The
birds should n ouly be in
health,
the taint
as it is
that
dropsy
imption should
ned Pv
wean and well vent
and
good, clean
sharp grit
sUupt ny water
avold draf
igorous and
birds
breeding
good free
from the
possible
has
been
bird
roup, iver dis
he breeding
cured, nor
» been
may not
80 affli«
man.
germs
disease
or soon
among the
owners and
much cash
clothing they
than if
their best
that that
gt growth 1
iid be fine
the chicks
winter
ire
before,
me teed will
the
the
grow
and bone,
hens will |
feed while
yo
!
for
must
' nus
flonk
the
on chick
wing
for
aR
Heo
their dress
the
Give hicks,” a trial
witha the
the
supply
20 unattended
the lice are very,
Ong
ention
water
tems
to shade,
to commence
nen
1
fine
vy under such
iid lav
le the fathers
ing
3 the Y
nlogi?. no nin fo
A hijo be
th
as
grow
woult should be completed
athors showing, quite
sfere cool weather, long
r
enoug before have the
or
fo
five
habit
times 2a
O
ope
week
ving gaven
Any hens that to the
mouil until frosty nights are the rule,
would better be sola ns soon as she
or they can be fattenead Any over
fat hen would be hetter sold at the
bezinning of moulting
I mean loaded with fat. 1
any more use for a scrawny hen than
for a serawny milk cow: neither they
nor the over fat onos will be profit
able, but there is a medium condi
tien that will be best for all con
cerned. Flesh enouzh to look well,
act well and feel well, but not enough
to éanse slusgishness
What is the chick feed? Wheat fe
the ideal grain, some sunflower seed
fs good, likewisn a little millet and
sorgum seed. Wheat bran with
little oil meal, thoroughly mixed with
it, is good either dry or in a crumbly
mash. Milk is fine, so are all table
gorane,. wholesome serant If green
stuff is scarce, feed refuse cabbage,
clover ghatterings, pea vines and sim-
flas greens~—E. C., In the Indiana
Farmer.
a —
GUINEAS AS A BURGLAR ALARM.
Guineas are well known for giving
lond voice to thelr disapproval of
intruding strangers, but it is not al
ways that this propensity is of such
gervice to their owners as was the
case at Norwalk, Conn. recently
when burglars entered the barn of
Alfred Hartog, a New Yorker, who
has & summer home there. He look
ed over his barn and horses and real
{zed that what electric burglar alarms
falled to do his guinea hens did. Bx-
fall beein
haven't
n
|
in the flock
ral
na..
A hen
pacity in
lay in an average
to 500 eggs
A farmer,
without good
A of
After
attaing her
her third
must not
isi Mt .
buildings. he
the poultry
build JNEs A
he remem to
must be kept clean and
sinfected at all times
the poultry: bus
CEES, Kive
chance and 5%
add 14; hens
other br
fucCens
suitable
must ber,
TOUR
h ’ =
improve thorough-
the poultry
will
fowls or
half a
eclipse 1
inting
profit
Bright color
hens
and
red is the fashionable
with the combs of health
When they begin to
purplish, look Pout
Dan’t corn
hens &®
want of eges
fat rather than eggs
starting with an
farm, use a small
to fill it with
handle it more
Give capons a trial and see if
will not Just because never
raised capons is no reason why
should keep on selling roosters.
The New York Experiment Station
has found that for growing chicks,
most grain rations are improved by
the addition of bone ash, this being
preferable to oystershell
i A»
1.
look dark
alone
and
feed
me wheat
plent oy
bator
It
incu
817s
on
in
ior
eggs and you
can readily
they
PAY YOu
you
HIS NOT TO REASON WHY.
Mis But to Do as He Was Told
Though Profits Dwindled.
A story is told of the Rothschilds
to illustrate the strict obedience
which they at all times exacted {rem
their employees, high and low.
They once had an agent in New
Orleans, a young and alert fellow
who kept his eyes and ears open.
According to System, they telegraph:
od him to sell their cotton holdings
on a specified day.
Believing that he had better in
formation on the local market than
his employers he held the sale ove
four days and netted an extra t
of 340,000. He promptly notified the
Rothschilds of his achievement
forwarded the bonus. The Rothschild!
returned the amount intact with a
cold note that ran:
“The $40,000 you made by disobey:
ing our Instructions is mot ours but
yours. Take It. Your successor sails
for New Orleans today.”
A Broadway (New York) ) Ssmesiot
Sitimuios hat She noone of