THE STILL HUNT. jhe wasn't going to get up on that 1 i ! ATTORNEYS, a A AAD OA | D, * rormuzy TAFT REMEDIES TO CURE TRUSTS (By Zitella Cocke.) Rose porsisted, he Ham thou named all the birds withe | to.morrow three days’ “Anyway, morning for a Jno. F. Gray & Son out a gun?-Emerson. Wake! Wake! quit your see on the horizon slumbers. ing to red. hing trip with Frank.” Agatha walked school 1 and low spirited, for blame for Paul's will the Academy from yowlild- she decision think to “What in woodland And meadow, outworth dreaming in bed. dose not the moments—-the south wind is searching all your May, the sun, Eulalle's her had She house Mias impulae led was passing and a sudden comfort here been denied her Eulalie listened to he finished, half A where it r story for hunting The game to rod or gun! be captured without Aye, plenty of game to the seeking, Proud trophies claim at his will, And spolls he may win, of the est and rarest, Whose mind is to follow, to kill. For Rim is the plaint muring brooklet, The song that is sighed sou! of the pine, Yhe bird €ar too high for of the rifle, The fish deyond reach of the he and the line, the hunter may rich. but never of the mur from ¢ the range The bright winged fancies o'er the shallows gleam on the breast calm, lilled lake, The tales whispered low by siping grasses, The secrets that hide tangled drake, The lore of the punctual b ward hieing, The thoughts in wood blossom The dreams that are haunting zephyrblown treet Or sailing the summer sky that And of the gOS in the fern- ird re i5 the heart of the shy, the D8 ps, ds the soft 3 En 7 ep Ol Brave hunter {s he of the woods’ an- cient wisdom, Daft angler who bobs for the water. falls’ tunes, The trapper who rock and the Their shadowy legends and myst! oa] runes Yhem up and away to the chase that is bloodless! Away to the sfreams without tackle or pole! The noblest game and sportsman Who hunt with the énr and the sonl! Youth's Companion snares from the river y of is for angler eye and the PTY 3% 870s ST >a ses ses OTA Miss Eulalie’s Secret. BY MARGARET E, DONNELLAN DESO ADLE O08 2,000 0000 Paul ceased his speech, “Our Homorod Dead,” brimming over with pathos and patriotism, and made his friumphant bow. As usual the Acad amy students went wild over their popular orator and he took his seat amid a tremendous outburst of ap whnase. Agatha Garvey, though she of and listened, was poi “He Ia insincere: effect,” she told herself ) Ris voloe has power to charm and his soul is not in what he Then because was herself she could not en shake his hand although she sok in her direction as flushed with success, rec: eongratulations teachers pis. The students scattered to their re. spective rooms in orderly confusion, and Rose Merton leaned across Aza tha's desk and sald, “Wasn't Paul Seavey wonderful?” Perhaps because she cared so much and the disappointment was so keen, Agatha flashed out: “He'd have been a thousand times more wonderful If he wasn't so con onfted about it” “Thank you” & volce behind her | amgwored, All the anger died away as she mw Paul's face, lips tightly closed, | ayes cold as steel, all the happy flush | of triumph gone save a flaming spot | of red on either cheek. They look od at ‘each other for a moment, then | Ne turned and took his seat and Aga | tha read something fn his eyes which sald he would not easily forgive That was an uncomfortable day for | Agatha. Paul had disappointed her, | but she bad dlundered In her eritl. | oiem. The next day was much the | same, and then day by day those | good friends passed each other with | & coldly polite nod. e preparation for the dedication | of the soldiers’ monument, the me | morial to the soldiers of Springvale | who had gone forth between '61 and | "5 was going on, and the Academy | dly received the mews that Paul | vey was asked to repeat his | speech, “Our Honored Dead,” at the | fedioation. The day before the event Rose Merton whispered fo Agatha, "Paul | Beavey Isn't going to speak at the | dodication” DIANNE » PLANER nas admir deeply he ale Bile of ty, “of course he is.” "I heard bm tell my brother Frank joo ed the soul It was a different Paul who receiv. the conrmtulations of the people AS SOON AS la he found his o a little and anxiously took his. Her words praise to him and somehow she felt her precious sec gale | hia keeping he eyond @ at and 8 aib old lad her two hands in way t of were sweet ret was Then here Hea to them thelr eves er Agath watching folt enc y oy '* AS | met RW tears th "Aw ratha an Fulal raised he the ‘oq g > | on Post Smallest Store. What is belleved to be the smallest in the world was opened business recently at Front street and It consists inches long, yw store 0 of two shelves, fourteen of the and the Ellsworth, secretary State Board of Agriculture, few handfuls of fruit and peanuts contains 280 square Inches. For more than a quarter of a cen tury the corner was the site of a news extended Bigelow court from Front street to Mechanic street, it was seen city It was demolished to allow the sireet to be extended and the new line goes to within fourteen inches of the Wilsworth bullding, Louis Oriente has rented these few inches from Mr. Ellaworth and start ad to do business, is stock In trade In a little structure abotit the size of 4 doz house in the rear of the Ellsworth building. When stand on the gldewalk.-~Boston Globe. Tha Battery. There had agaln been trouble in the O'Hagan household, anid O'Hagan had ye and yer wolfe,” sald O'Hogan. “An' that's where ye're wrong* “Tis the foine, toam | | AND ABATE RAILROAD ABUSES FOR INTERSTATE COMMERCE. “United " FOR CORPORATIONS. States Court of | Urges Federal Incorporation of “In. Limited Rallway dusfrials,” With Prohibition of Protection to Holding Companies ~ Interprets Shippers, Added Power to Come Anti-Trust Law as Permitting mission Over Rates, Limited Combinations Not Oppressive— Iailroad Acquisition of Interest Declares Purpose to Push Prose in Competing Corporations, and cution of All Suits to Dissolve | Monopolistic “Good and “Bad" Trusts, Favors Commerce, un Pools, Increased Unnuthorized Issu- ance of Railway Securities. Forbidding Concerns == No | | THREE COURSES OPEN TO CORPORATIONS UNDER LAW AS OUTLINED BY PRESIDENT TAFT. ently adopted in 1 and ¢ ping 8 be for themsgelves into los to the ry of 3 of injunction rec thorou three solve pProsod that & thie tions the « COUrse m their quent i § concen of law } us and under somesecret trust they must Federal on to continue their 3 incur the pen: ution of ness slatute ties of contemg ring » individuals an :vitable the decree and thelr They must reorganize and faith the Fed- es not intend to lessen gree its prosecution of Dinations which ing the c¢ome- yd epke o ch com- imi ions as with the Anti. 1. i nw To this end he recommends a grant. conducted law for the charters however, 1j0ins | i 8 « in interstate n from un- ate and re ervision to pre- abuses which have arisen under control Federal ngag gress lest it dis nNerce, pre itecting srference by £4 National sg President d in eals State ation with the two gr Such a law would subject the real mitted from his annual message, the | and ; al property only to the Interstale and Anti-Trust same taxation is imposed by the laws require complete sand word at regular inter- oth anies will be for iares the Sher. need ies of de. floes not urt renders ig the aet as dent idea itr Ew SAYS, that aig" duced the President declares MON. that fie ¥ smd Ye ”e Tee 8 ‘ and pun- restraine ished until ended TAFT REMOVES PINCHOT. Chief of Forestry Burean Dismissed For Insubordination. Washington. D. C President Taft dismissed Gifford Pinchot. Chief of the Forestry Bureau, and the fight between the Roosevelt radicals and (the conservative wing of the Repub. lican parity is on in earnest The President's action came after a Cab- inet session that lasted practically all day When it broke up, just before dinner tim2 in the evening, there was isrued at the White House a copy of a letter sent by the President to Mr. Pinchot In this letter, after gam- ip the acts of the forester that led him to take such action. Mr. Talt * Authority to eo } to aet, or its own ati investigating falrne nd to pass on classifications of commodities Power the commission to hold | up for a limit of sixty days proposed increases of rates until it shall have passed upon their reasonablens found unreasonable, to crease or fix a maximum iving shippers the right to desig nate through routes over which their shipments shall pass Forbidding railroads to acquire tarest 0 any competing raliroad other competi eorporation ros affecting owner acquired issuan of railway ids unless par ed for them BR Of rates or ractices. n Art to in 5 but with ceriain provi ady bidding ming ming value has it at less reasonable iarket ocd by the comn to or ’ have de You ae Tesfs pial as a he je, the ness MINIs where is servic than mon Gove: becomes srotary of nment, duty to Agrieniture office ns and di io For- anply : ow Yeo ‘ + your rovig MMeres ithisso ower etermine unifo ant sit the He addre Overton © cision of the Presi ted to Mr. Pinchot, rice, Asscolate Fore rester, and rt Shaw, assistant {law officer of Forestery Bureau, letters substantially indentical Cos upon ety apni y anni tari dent rm of to ' and ita the gory pi 8 in sails under the Employer's Liability act Az to the Anti-Trust law {dent recommends Voluntary Federal ine irporation of | interstate induosirial concerns, with prohibition of the “holding company” evil. Indorsement of combinations of in- on ting 4 ng of the Pres. INSURGENTS DEFEAT CANNON. i —— | They Combine With Democrats and Begular Republicans—149 to 140. | Washington, D. C -—For the first { ime Speaker Cannon and his organ. cided not to constitute harmful | ization were defeated in the House, frusta; thus relieving certain classes| The vote was 149 to 148 Twenty- subject to unjust condemnation under | three insurgent Republicans, three | regulars and 123 Democrats turned | Several pages of the message are the trick against 145 regular Repub- devoted to an elucidation of the! licans and one Democrat. The Speaker and his organization that its inhibition does not lie against | admitted defeat and made no further combinations of which the main pur- | attempt to frustrate the will of tie pose is economy of administration | majority The insurgents won on the and increased efficiency, destruction | issue for which they have contended of ecompetition being merely incl consistently since thelr movement dental; but only against those that | was organized; they took out of the hands of the Speaker the power to {appoint a committee The committee which the Speaker lost was the important House end of the Ballinger-Pinchot investigation, | The three regular Republicans who joined the insurgents were: Herbart Parsons, of New York; Butler Ames, | | of Massachusetts, and Hamilton Fish, of New York. of monopoly in whole or in part by Mr. Taft is careful to point out that the Sherman Anti-Trust wrongs which that He defends the He declares emphatically that the ow Price of Milk Was Raised, | How the raising of the price of milk from eight to nine cents was brought about and how New York i City just missed a further increase to ten conte were revealed at the Milk | Trust inquiry in that eity, t i ———— Kentucky's First Distiller Dead, J. C. Mattingly, who operated the gix years. He amassed a fortune in the liquor business and retired ten years ago. a” Canada’s Population 7,350,000, The Canadian Dureau of Census, at Ottawa, estimules the population of Cavada at tho close o. the year at 7,350,000. The Provivee of On. tario leads with 2,619,025. Increase in Sheep. The National Association, in its ane pual estimate, places the number of sheep fit for shearing in the United Btates at 42,202,205, an increase ol 1,081,667 over the preceding year, » (Buccdssors $0...» GRANT HOOV Control Stxteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Companies in the World. . , ,. THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST No Mutuals Neo Amessraents Before insuring r life see the contract of HE HOME which in case of death between the tenth and twentieth years re- turns all premiums peid in ed. dition to the face of the policy. v . - to Loan on Firse Mortgage Office In Crider’s Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection Meoeney 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE ¥ Scientific American, MUNN & Co,2¢:erese-n New Yorb EARLY RAILROADING. » early days of railroads, says ries in his “9 derick Carter, hen interesting volume, sew,” the his t conservative, He n, even one as simple as li-cord, first Con- r Henry Ayers in 1842. Previ- had no means of nication between the engine the A vy w mauctor A Were » engineer n, and autocrats seldom welcomed autocrat of ral as invented by there been moving tran yers rigged u . wit up a cord passing through the cars ith a stick * end that hung down in the engineer that stick jerk up and But Jacob engine, was a man, with iis slop top. cut loose with fire in ’ snked the indignant Harnei from his engine, and afer a tough fight, thor- oughly thrashéd him The primitive stick was soon re- placed by a bell, and the device was complete Engineer Isaac Lewis rebelled with equal vigor against the first attempt to run a train by telegraphic orders, at a time when the telegraph, then in its infancy, was still so little used that messages began formally, “Dear 8i and concluded: with, *Yours Respectfully.” He was running a belrted west. bound .rain onc day in 1852, occurred to his superintendent, Charles Minot, who was on 1 to Turner's, where they meet an yet reached It had It was again and at the frst stop Avers, hig eve 5 iw it - - ta when it ward a telegraph from had 3 failed if it fo had to glia and he then ow {vy volo rain aoroer express, 10W the 5 ¥ tion ahead rot, wrote the first telegraphic 7 Hold orders. - Creshen furthe nian Tent er Minot, superi He then wrote anoth t order, which lie handed the conductor di- T= , recting the engineer to go ahead, gardless of Isaac lewis merely the express Lm iad qu'red if they and de. Neither persuasion nor threats him down from his engine nd took Fis place as cngineer, he ing the head-on 2ollision which did By repeating his telegraphic orders nd inquiries, Minot ran the train that all trains or the The engineers, under Lewis’ lead, at thas “erazy risk.” but Shipbuilding in Japan, founded by the Government in 1857, works. When the undertaking was are employed. CS BN MI SO AR. HIS VIEW OF nLIFR, “Naw.” - renHed tion that I can’t seem to anne: © Louisville Courler-Jonrnal, ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFONTE PA { Ofios North of Court House. YW. RADRISON WALKER ATTORNEY -ATLAW BELLEFONTR Pa Fe. 19 W. High Street. = ST Se | B.D. Gerri Ize. J. Bowne W.D. Zzanw | CHETTIO, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS AT LAW EsoLz Broox BELLEFOXTE, PA. Bacocamsors wo Onvia, Bowes & Oxvys Consultation in Englah snd German CLEMENT DALE Ww ATTORI EY AT-LAW BELLEFONTR Pa Office K. W. corner Diamond, two doors Pom First Nationa! Bank. YW G RUNKLR ATTORNEY -AT LAW BELLEFONTE, Pa. All kinds of legal business stiended Wo prompaly Epecial attention given to colisctions. Office, Boor Crider's Exchange j HR B. SPANGLER ATTORNEY -AT-LAW BELLEFORTR. PA Practices in all the courts. Consnltation Is English and German Offos, Orider's Kxobawes Bu Ying pil Old Fort Hotel EDWARD ROYER, Proprietor Location : One mile Bouth of Centre Hall Aosommodations first-clam. Good ber. Parties wishing te enjoy an evening given special stlention. Meals for sueh oconsions PPG pered om short netics. Always poepasel for the tranelent trade. BATES : $1.00 FER DAY. be ational Hote! MILLEEIM, PA B A. SHAWYER Prop Plast dam scormmodetions for the Srevele Bool able board and sieepicg &parumsst The ehoisest Liguoms at the ber. Sable ap ommodations for horses in the best 9 by bod. Bos wand from sll traine moh Lewisburg and Tyrone Ratirosd, 81 Osbars LIVERY « Special Effort made to ccommodate Com mercial Travelers... D. A. BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa. Penn’a R, R P's Valley Banking Company CENTRE HALL, PA W. B. MINGLE, Cashie Receives Deposits . . Discounts Metss - "ae H. GQ. STRCHIIEIER, CENTRE MALL, . . . . PEN Manufacturer of and Dealer In HIGH GRADE... MONUMENTAL WORK in all kinds of Marble ve Qranite, Dom fail 9 got my pries. | nsuRance Legency IN CENTRE COUNTY H. E..FENLON Agent Bellefonte, Penn’a. The Largest and Best Accident Ins. Companies Bonds of Every Descrip- ‘surance at low rates.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers