The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 03, 1910, Image 6

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Qoafesses Murdor,
Wilkes-Barre.
sharged with murdering
ards an amateur hypnotist,
ercised an improper hypnotic
over Mrs. Babb, pleaded gullty
murder in order to save his wile the |
humiliation of having to publicl- tell
about her relations with Richards.
Michael Babb,
Philip Rich-
who ex-
power
of
gree of the murder, Judge Fuller]
heard the testimony privately Mrs, |
Babb told how Richards had hypnotiz- |
ed her and how his power over hei |
finally became so great that she told
her husband and asked for his
tection. Babb's attorneys also si
ed there Is a taint of insanity in
family and that he has twice bi
when blood poison developed
his head 1s badly swollen
gaverely injured in the head. and t
injuries are inclined to prodvce men.
tal weakness,
pro-
Ow
his |
Now
¥
ue
Dies Praying.
Mt. Carmel.—A disastrous
South Market Street resulted in
death of Mrs, Joseph Hinkle, 30 years
old, and the mother of three children
A nine-year-old boy carried out his
4-year-brother and then hurried bac
throush the smoke and flames and
hanted and carried to safety his year. |
old baby sister. After the fire was ex.
tinguished and the excitement died
down. a teamster examining the ruin;
found the woman, knee
hands clasped and upraised
prayer. Almost all of
was burned fr
ATO
1 a
fire on
thi
her
n har hody
In ager i ‘J
Justices To Sve Counties,
Schuvikill
Asse
the
ia
Pottaville The
Justices h
made a 1A
Qontroller that
the new fee
with a fi
sontends
asplicable
before next year,
make a test ca
recover $4,000
Peace
ipon
they be paid
of 1
refusal
the
frat
18
809 They me
The Control
new fee bill is
commis
mm
that
to
Pr
in excess |
Cuts Down Horse Thief's Sentence,
Carlisle i
sentence
James Alexander
stealing, to 2a minim
and six months
thirty years, after
been taken by ex-D
William A Krame«
allornay
Judge
of thirt
Sadler amended
¥Y Years
convict
ar
Coasters Hit Pastor.
Joraovy Shore
confined
2
»
from
te
ts hi
govore infur
Was ru inte
which a crowd
He wos }
mn 44
fey thre
Jacob Hos
cain
man
glrarettea
ahiange TT
eate of the
fion mint
digtinet
was
who
Apprentice School,
Altoona Th
road Comnany
preantice school
fourth year app
elas will be com
men The ides
gaveral weeks
president
the
nrofe
of State
to Ralliron
SECT
mo
an
ies and 1»
Mast Ieave On
Catiawissa
tawissa,
ira
Hand Iotter
Brown. a
the police and
gavel who
You
must |
days
harned
Bon’!
is signed
f
Mr. Moon Re-elected,
York 10] C*
ville, was re-clectad
Pennsylvania Nurserymen's
tion at the closing
seventh annual convention here
Other officers elected were: Vices
president, Wilmer C of Mor-
risville; secretary, Earl Myers, of Car.
lsle: treasurer, Thomas Rakestraw, o
Kennett Square. Among other promi.
sent nurserymen who attended the!
esnvention were Earl Peters, Car- |
Hale; Thomas Mechan:, Georgetown: |
H. T. Moon, Morrisville Morris
Jones, of West Grove; Adolph Miller
Norristown, and Samuel Kerr, Lan-|
easter, i
Sam
president of the
Asanein
of the
aeasion
Hooves,
Stabbed By Hat Pin,
Easton. Thomas Decerto is suf-|
fering from an Injury he received]
In a peculiar manner a few evening: |
ago. While at a moving picture |
show a woman who sat directly in|
front of him threw back her head |
in laughing. and one of her hat ping |
strunk Decerto near the right temple |
The injury pained him, but he paid
no attention to it until Wednesday,
i
Blind Man Wears Out Bible,
Chester. After nang a Bible with
mised letters for the last twenty
years and wearing the face off the
characters until they were no longer
readable, Edward 1. Overton, a blind
man. of this city, who is an member
of the Bible Class of Mallson Street
Methodist Enlscopa! Churoh, found
that he would have to abandon the
book. At a recent meeting of the
clans Mr, Overton was presented with
a new Bible, He was overcome with
joy when the book was handed to
“A
Ray
VAAL D
College Extension,
The trustees of the Pennsylvania
State College at thelr annual session
indorsel the movement for college
extension, including a night school
at Williamsport, and an apprentices’
school at Altoona. It was also de
cided to pport the train for in
struction in safety appliances to be
run throvegh mining regions. The
trustees re-elected are: General
fames Beaver, Bellefonte, pres
dent; Walton Mitchell, Pittsburg
ident, and Dr. E. E. Sparks
president of the college, gecre
tary, The Executive Committee was
150 reelected These instructor
chosen Homer Clouker, Still
Oklahoma, and H, A. Dodge
Vi., assistants in animal
W. Gregg, Philadelphia
horticulture and CC, A
Hobensack, N.
vil engineering
au
A
H
Vice res
were
ingion,
nutrition; J
in
Hogentogler,
i
Henhouse,
A tale of
was brought to
Stout in court here
for several
Loulo Tope
children been living
in Lower Makefield
where her
Doylestown
and suffering
Judge
appears that
and Mrs
notice of
have in a
baby was born a few days
wv. came from
I ur » tO
in
I 8E
p
thle
.
jest, they might
into
Tope is sald
woman, but is
wrovide for the family
ind, according to
ard. The 8S. P. C. C.
with the children
fed and
ion
the Court di
jzati mart
nton authorities should
fa
persons moved
rters. Mrs
ndustrious
only
nearly
poorly
r consultat
Ryan
on he
"wy
the mily
For Big Borough.
A
the
has
in
novement
small towns
rn section of the coun
form a greater bor
contended larger bene.
derived by the citizens
yarby Township. Lans
Clifton Heleghts, Dar.
Aldan and Collingdale,
ng combined | one
Such a borough would
tion of 40.000, and
roads, street
protection
certain portion
nip grow-
Phila.
Lansdowne
tarts by
nto
are
nflux of
Hat Pin,
11]
that
id, of
tabbing a
a hu
and
ded
rom
breast a
penotrats i
death. The
of Mr. and
Several
with
been
s+ he has
night hia
m and he told
er to
could
she went to
¢ found him
bleading
return
glee
Probation Officer Gets $1200,
Reading Officer W
Rel upon the
r official by Judge
a saiary of $3100
wamed as proba
a year ago by
was paid by pris
Probation
placed
er was
] coun
Wit Company Chartered.
aged to t
S|
Leba
Company
apital It
spikes and
he
{
Dies Of Fright In Wife's Arms,
Altoona While driving to his
ners Gap, Reverdy Host
fell over in hia wile's
sad from fright The cuts
which he and his wife wore
gtarted to slide and Hostler,
fearing it would go over a high am-
benkment., became highly agitated.
As soon as the runners dropped into
a rut and stopped the movement Lo
Bethlehem Thirty-eight
flags were given to the publie schools
of Bethlehem by Captain A. A. Luck.
enbach Camp, Sons of Veterans
With the installation of the flags the
1,800 public schoo! children will be
military salute to the flag.
Casper Krug, Musician, Dead.
Reading. -~Casper Krug, one of
the ploneer musicians of this city,
died, aged 69 years. He played alto
horn with the famous Ringgold Band
for more than half a century and
gerved as a musician in the Civil
War,
A—
Girl Killed Helping Mother,
Shenandoah. Before returning
to school for the afternoon “"Kittie”
Klock, aged 14 years, at the noon
hour erawled under a loaded coal
ear to plek a scuttle of coal for her
widowed mother. The train started,
cutting off both the ehild’'s legs bo
low the knee, She cannot recover,
Nonogenarian Fractures Skull,
Shamokin, — Catharine ‘'Tinnerty,
90 years old, fractured her skull In
falling on a stairway. She was In.
him.
tally injured.
iar R
MEAT YEAR
New York City.
the name
entrance
porter to one
age plants
methods empl
pay fictitious
seen at first |
All ths
tigation
employe
plants
sedulously
would discios
foodstuffs
knock the
in New Y
are kept
to for i
of the
slorage '
“There has
iF. 1
the spac
tempera!
throug?
here 3
short
eam
May
teen
fiow
lose
are br
Come alon
they Co
He led
filled =
cans, and
was only
The ars
fgg yo 3
*while
recent
ou
er
fe
ith
ELS §
th th
and ¢ h the
He said ths ZEEE In some
of the » «18 wei five old and the
conten's came {rom China
A man who participated
tour of inspection and who
worked in a cold alc
the ton of these
kno~c~4 off in bandiing.
he said, was so
workmen refused to handle the can.
Eezes in this form are known to the
trade ns “cgzoline,” and ace used ex-
In
formerly
one of cans being
and other pastries
Two huge storerooms
meat which hung in a temperature of
six degrees above zero were next vis-
ited. Beef, veal, mutton, lamb and
000 pounds had been in storage for
soven months,
the spring and summer at the lowest
wholesale prices and distributed when
the public Is compelled Lo buy at
famine figures.
The Meat Packers! Side Discussed
by J, Ogden Amour,
Chicago —"Deel is only about halt
aeomt Bizhor than It was a year ago,”
said J. Cgden Armour. “Like many
ther things, it has risen during the
Inst few soars, hut this ls because its
production hag not kept pace with the
demand,
“Move people are buying meat and
are buying more ment than ever bes
fore, while stock raising has shown
ttle ¥f any change. Consequently
hMghesr mont prevalls, The packers do
not dictate the prices.’
XS Page os 3
Wa
A
aN
1 “ii LE
}
B
bert Garter
$28 . .
ér cold storage plants
Year now, ad
ge men's own
gling wage earn
1.800.000,000 eg
130.000.000 poultry.
Fruiiz valued at $50,000,000,
Then, besides, there are millions of
pounds of potatoes, onions, thousands
of turtios, eele, cases of canned goods
and milk, butter and cheese valued
at $£1060.000,000,
The total value of meat and food
stuffs placed in ¢6ld storage during a
year at present is, according to the
| figures of the storage concerns, close
to $2.000,000,000,
These cold storage figures do not
include the tremendous value of
( llquors in storage at breweries, dis-
tilleries aud private places, the valne
of furs in storage, nor the value of
food supylies in cold storage at pri-
vate plants,
All those food stuffs
8
are hustled
owing to the laws of nature, the food
sumer, They are held to any length
to maintain high prices.
Cattle Production Does Not Keep
cultarist. In its annual review of live
stock on the farms it gays that the In.
crease in value in the last twelve
number of hogs and eattle other than
recorded. The upward movement of
values the lact year: is shwply a part
of the upvard trend.
anTerTeslenTasTovie Te via Tawi PAL |
. |
o
WORTH QUOTING #
HPAP, AV AP AV AVSI AVA SVAN NY
ar iariaviarieris nog |
W080 A
If we could only deal
vandite ae we do with the Central |
American kind, sighs the New York |
fmerican. |
rights, declares
that lead oth
No man bas
the Chicago 1
gs w
any
ribune,
rong
not mercen |
n Globe, but
gin to thew
are
ver wake
manufac
finding
then
and
oly ond
AE ud
there
Free Press,
the tenor of the
ne comes, how
trade
has
will
dee
of
develop, it
nast th face
3 able
Presi
“aif
been
hiv
ented
Ameri
pried
a, that
Too
up his
an In
| 114,
yured on him
circumstances
cing
fo give
on
take
.
him t
mes of ammonia
that a dog can
his grip and his
time.
$ go im
The 1
8en gverpowering
nossibly aintain
the same
the St Louis Post Dis
battleship Utah is the
largest and heaviest war ship ever
built in the United States and ex
pents declare she has no equal afloat
as a first class fighting machine
Needless to go over the figures of
her length, her tonnage, her draught,
her beam, her armor, her armament
and her cost let it He conceded
mediately
are
not
breath at
Remarks
patch The
midable ever—and that she is our
going to do with her?
It Russia imagines that the Unit
give
the
fam which started with the sinking
of the Maine has nearly subsided,
and our appetite for islands is pret
ty well satisfied. When Russia puts
service thus far has been as a penal
settlement, upon the anction block the
United States will not compete with
:
i
i
i
i
Musyeon's Paw Pow
petivity bw gentle me
§ WenE en i hey
e to the best of thet
bailey ala wily free nrg MIKYON'S
G36 mud Jeflerson Sin, Philadelphia, Pa
¥ un yon & Old Remed oo i in e Any
Yrs Buy ' iy relieves
oe lew DOES BG CUI
w Le
ONSTANT TORTURE,
vere (Case
Was Cog
f Kidpey Discase
rered,
After Naval Revolution,
on ws
"dv
had
BH . To
Then he ju
strode
talked to an
came out and wi
officer.
“31
modified
cer
chie!
and
He
a mit He
up to the timid
moon
v4
iL
yes.’
{one
WANTS HER
TTR
PUBLISHED
For Benefit of Women who
Suffer from Female lls
Minnea
sufferer
lis, Minn.—“I was a
rom female troubles whieh
: caused a weakness
and broken down
condition of the
system. I read
muchofwhat Lydia
E. Pinkham's Veg-
etable Compound
had done for other
suffering women I
felt sure it woukl
help me, and I must
say it did help me
wondertelk M
pains all le i
row stronger, and within three mon
was a perfectly well woman.
“1 want this letter made publie to
show the benefit women may derive
froma Lydia E. Pinkham's V
Compound." Mrs. Jonx (. MoLDAX,
35 Second St, North, Minneapolis,
nn.
Thousands of unsolicited and genu.
ine testimonials like the above va
the stoi of Lydia E. Pinkham's
0
Vegetable Compound, which is made
Cra vely pr gee) and herba,
Women who suffer from those dis.
tressing ills peculiar to their sex should
not lose sight of these facts or doubt
the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Yegotable Compound to restore their
ifr want special write
confidential,’ For