The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, June 02, 1910, Image 6

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    A
AL TURNEYS,
1—_ vs sc p—
D P. PORTHEY
.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
BELLEFONTE, Wu
| Office Nerth of Court Bouse
& r HARRIAON WALKER
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
BRELLEFONTR Pe
Feo. I* W. High Street.
AY profesional business promptly attended ta
RRs ae ———— ———————
AD. Gerric Iwo. J. Bowsa W.D Zausr
kre, BOWER & ZERBY
ATTORNEYB- AT LAW
EaoLr Broos
BELLEFONTE. 7.
Buocessors to Orvis, Bows a Orvis
Oomsultation in Englab and German.
QLEueNT DALR
| ATTORFEYV-AT-LAW
BELLEFONTE. ?»
! Office N. W. corner Diamond, two doors frus
I Nutioual Bank. Ir
TW @ RUNKLE
ATTORNEY AT-LAW
BELLEFONTE, Ps
kinds of legal busines altended Ww promm
allenilon given to solisctions. Office, »
Crider's Exchange. ye
~All
® B. SFARGLER
.
ATTORNEY-AT AW
BELLEFONTR Ps
Practioes in all the cearw. Consn!!stion
Bogint sad German. Ofoce, Order's Rxosaug
Butktine tee
Did hit Hote;
EDWARD ROYER. Proprietor
Location 1 One mile South of Centre Hall
osomtuodations first-class Good bar. Perum
: wishing © enjoy an evening given spect
attention. Mosls for soch occasions pow
pated on short notice. Always peepated
for the transient trade,
RATES : $1.00 PER DAY.
LIVERY «2
Special Effort made to
Accommodate Com
mercial Travelers...
D. A. BOOZER
Centre Hall, Pa. Penn'a R. R
80 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
© Trace Manxs
Desscns
Corynicaurs &ec.
Anvane sending 5 sketrh and Sasary ion may
1y se artain our opdnkon wihor an
gon fn is peobahly paten gy herr
a rotly sontidentisal, Handbook on Patents
patents,
2. vosslr
fran, (idest agency for seoorin
Ere a taken throneh Maun &
withous ehargs, Wu the
“Scientific Attierican,
er RA
Hii § G0, 3618romm New York =~ New York
N&C
Pos Yale Bog Compu
CENTRE HALL, PA
W. B. MINGLE, Cesk
Receives Deposits .
Discounts Netes . . .
H. G, STROHTIIEIER,
CENTRE MALL, . . . .
Manufacturer of
and Dealer mm
HIGH GRADE ...
FAONUMENTAL WORK
in all kinds of
Marble ao
Granite, Dont fail 0 got my prion.
.
PE™N
LHgency
IN CENTRE COUNTY
/
H. E. oan
Agent
Bellefonte, Penn’a.
Accident Ins. ©
Bonds of Every
tion. Fate Glmss n=
surance at low ratée,
FA BHAWYER, Prop
Pit slam sccommodstions for he Wravele
Sood table board and sleeping apartments
The shotoest liquors at the bar. Sable ae
sommodations for horses is the best 0 be
bad, Bus and from all trainee on the
Lewisburg and Tyrone afirand, ot Oobaryg
~ wi
iE A a
i Jno. F. Gray & Son
Succdssors to.
URANT HOOVER
Control Sixteen of the
Lacgest Fire and Lite
Insurance Companies
lo the World. . , . .
THE BEST IS THE
CHEAPEST' , . .
No Mutuals
Ne Assessments
Before insuring |
the cont*sct of
which io case of death between
the tenth and twestieth years re.
turns all premiums pa ad-
dition to the face of the policy,
Money
life sce
HRB IIOMEB
to Loan on Fiver
Mortgage
Office tn Crider’s Stone
n r pautidiag
Telepbons
TTI TI ITI ITI TTI YY
"LABOR WORLD. -
A temple of labor in Atlanta ape
pears assured.
ed Lynch at Indianapolis.
A federation of 6000 miners was
recently effected in Wyoming
The British trade union congress
will open at Sheffield on September 12.
Chicago bill posters have gained $3
a week increase and improved condi-
tions
Laws
for bureaus
Texas.
An existing office in South Carolina
is changed =o as to give it the charac.
ter of a labor burean
The Bakers' International Union
has decided to start the six-day work-
ing week In New Orleans, La.
In Sioux Falls, 8 D., there are
| iventy aves unions, and Aberdeen,
Lead, Huron and Deadwood are all
well organized
The troubles which recently led to
the lockout of many thousands in the
Jullding Trades Council in Germany
have been settled.
Members of the Honesdale (Pa.)
branch of the shoemakers' union de-
cided to incorporate a company for
the manufacture of miners’ shoes
The Labor party of Australia car
ried the recent general elections
That party has a majority in each
house of the Commonwealth Parlia-
ment.
Organized labor is fast gaining in
Santa Cruz County, California. Re-
cently the brickliayers, cement work-
ers, plasterers and carpenters formed
unions.
The bill to license master electri.
clans in New York developed such op-
position on the part of the Electrical
Workers’ Union and kindred organi-
tations that it was killed in commit-
fee at Albany
—-—
PROMINENT PEOPLE.
have been passed providing
of labor in Oklahoma and
——_— —
Mr. Roosevelt,
trouble, consult
don.
John Wanamaker,
was a luncheon guest
House
King George in the first
reign remitted and reduced
of culprits
Dalmores, a famous tenor, signed a
contract to sing four scasons in Amer.
ica for $200,000
Lewis Nixon declared that the
United States should not share the
use of the Panama Canal with other
nations.
Vice-President Sherman, in a
speech at Kalamazoo, Mich., spoke
i In behalf of the Administration and
the tariff law.
The Duke of M
of the Duke of
New York City
{ around the world
Representative
experiencing throat
ed a specialist in Lon-
of Philadel
at the
phia,
White
act of his
sentences
Orleans, arrived in
on a hunting trip
William 8. Bennet
in a letter to Governor Hughes asked
the latter's co-oper ation in facilitating
naturalization In the New York State
courts,
i Gifford Pinchot, the farmer Chief
| Forester of the United States, was a
| passenger oni board the steamer Ara-
bie, which sailed from Liverpool for
i New York.
FACTS OF BROILER RAISING.
Although there are many who at-
tempt broiler raising, few make the
industry pay to any great extent.
Probably there is no
of the
this special line.
it 18 a good idea to
brooder always a little
the «center than any
have
warmer
in other por-
96 degrees, for several days after
hatching. From that time on
may reduce the temperature
fivo degrees each week, until the
thermometer registers about seventy.
An even temperature is the first step
success. Too much stress
In fact,
ventilation and c'eanliness than feed.
ing.
the need
that rather sparing food during
of Brith Abraham, New York City,
when he sald Jews are firm friends of |
good government,
Llewellyn A. Shaver, solicitor for
| the Interstate Commerce Commission,
died suddenly at his residence in
{ Washington, D C.,
| ease. He was born in Bowling Green,
Ky., in 1842. He served in the Con-
federate Army.
American Ambassador Will Live In
Austria In acquiring a lease of
Kolewrat Palace, Richard C. Kerens,
the American Ambassador, will be
former representative at this eourt
The palace was built by Baron Albert
Rothschild, for his ron, Baron Oscar
Rothschild, who committed suicide
last July because, it was gaid, of a
love affair with a Chicago girl, The
palace has spacious state apartments
and occupies a commanding situation
on high ground.
SHORTHANDED.
Cinburta == “What are your
dv iay Plamist <« “I'l read your
wil for one dollar.”
Cunbusta--"Yoiu cught to do It
for ninety cents; I've got one finger
iasing. —-Judge. .
Yow
"wa
*
ra ——”
§
§
i
i
From the first hour in
they should have as
cold water as they want. If
sweet skim-milk in clean
vessels is also good. The casein in
the milk acts as a wonderful stim-
ulant for their growth and develop
meat. So long as starchy, albumin-
and green matter, in the nature
of seeds, Insccts, lettuce, ete. is
fed, the chicks will thrive. A most
important point in feéding
them a variety of That is,
keep them gu-ssing as to what Is to
come next. They are much like hu
mans in this ress ever ready to
devour the unexpected delicacy with
much relish, Keep them scratching
and working as much as possible for
food. Hang a plede of lettuce
ery juct of their reach so they
will have jump to pick it And
eprinkle bird secd in sand or a litter
to keep them busy Of course, in
raising later Broll~-+, it is a good
scheme let the birds scratch
of doors as soon after hatching
the weather permits
Remember, when fattening. steer
away from muscle and bone making
foods Corn, cooked, mashed. or
ground showld be fed them every
dey. Warm potrtoos, milk, and a lit
tle sugar are also admirable flesh
producers for young chicks Give
them fresh water At leagt twice a
day, and hasten the fattening as fast
as possible or it will prove a losing
operation. --Larsasll J. Bailey, in the
Indiana Farmer
the brooder,
CLE
food.
MeL,
or cel
out
in
io out
as
BIG AND LITTLE BGUS
Feow prople of the 50.000 who
eat them know that eggs lald by cer
tain Leghorns hens are fifty per cent
larger than those contributed by
games and Hamburgs, says Washing
ton Post. Thirty dozen the latter
are found to weigh thirty-six pounds
while the same number of former
weigh ffiy-four pounds Yet both
bring the same price on the market
Brahmas and Minoreas proluce CLES
that weigh forty-eight ds to the
thirty dozen. The average hen of
the egg. producing West stands #pon
sor for a prod that hs forty
three pounds, while th: rverage egg
froduced in Denmark weighs forty
eight pounds to the dozens,
If eggs sold by the prund, it would
be better business buy the big
ones, for there is less proportionate
waste in the shells. Two of the best
would weigh as much and contain
more nourishment than three of the
smallest. When Hamburg eggs were
bringing twenty eents, Western eggs
would worth twenty-three, Brah
mas twenty-seven, and the best grade
of Leghorn. thirty cents. If the eges
of the United States wore of the
8.me number as al present, but of
the size of the best. thelr value
would be increased $25.000.000,
The eggs of Kansas are worth $8.
900,000 each year, and are a great
‘ontribution to the health and hap
pines of the nation. “Candling”
eges upon their arrival in the city
results in the throwing out
worth each year.
cent of them all are culled as “dir
ties” and sold at a reduced price,
O00
of
poun
ict
wel
thirty
to
be
$2,000,000. The development of the
embryonic chick during the heated
4 ERE |
During the cold, the hens should
not leave the nests too long, hence
the feed, water, grit and dust bath
should be handy.
A good sitter will stick to her nest
ag closely ss necessary,
en by thirst, hunger or lice, so one
| should see that the sitters are made
as comfortable as possible.
Many sprinkle the eggs a few
| times during the incubation,
never found it necessary,
| duck and goese eggs;
seeming to supply the Necessary
moist heat; probably no harm would
result, unless the eggs became chil
led. ”
Some advocate washing the
with a disinfectant before placing un
der the hens, or in incubators, this
might be a very good thing: we are
old fashioned enough to think water
destroys something on the shell that
is best left undisturbed.
Of course when eggs get fouled, it
| Is essential that they be cleansed, in
| order to open the pores of the shell
When repeated washings are neces-
except with
as many por as stout chicks, partly
due, no doubt, to the extra handling,
as well as the washings.
Don't give the early sitters more
than eleven or twelve eggs apiece,
too many eggs to a hen is a mis
take that is too common.
HATCHING SEABON,
We clip the following from Poultry
Life in America
Probably the most interesting sea-
son of a poultryman’s work Is when
the chicks begin to arrive, and cer
tainly one of the most important,
things Is to have your breeding stock
in the proper shape for the produe-
tion of strong, healthy chicks, or the
interesting part will short-lived.
The breeding stock must be healthy
and vigorous, or their offspring will
be weak and puny, and the time
spent with them will be wasted and
your efforts In vain.
If young stock composes your pens,
ste to it that they are well matured
and fully developed If the females
you are using for breeders are pul
letn, it is preferable mate them
with a vigorous two yearold cock.
The various observations made,
while not entirely conclusive, ind!
cate that in order to secure fertile
eggs, which will hatch, the laying
stock, must not be kept in very warm
quarters overfed: the male must
be kept with the hens continuously
and that only eggs should be used
which are produced after the male
has been with the hens several days.
Only the fowls from very vigorous
parent stock and those known to pro
duce a high percentage of fertile
egge (hens vary widely this re
spect) should be used: the hens
should be allowed a rest after each
laying period, while the eggs should
be handled carefully, not subjectéd
to extremes of temperature in stor
age and used only when comparative
iy fresh
be
io
9
Or
in
LOCATIONS.
A great deal depends upon the lo
cation of the poultry farm -—-the prof
health of the flock, and the
conveniences to the manager. Of
course, the profits depend upon all
other things combined, but the
amount received from shipments de
pend upon whether the express
charges are high or whether the lo
cation on the farm is adjacent to a
good market. If possible, the poul
try man should locate near some
good market, and near to a railroad
station, so that transportation
charges will be small. The location
should be within easy access to a
railroad station that carries direct
to some market, so that the coops,
crates and barrels will not have to
handled after they are placed in
they reach their des
ination. This is especially important
with large shipments of live fowls.
The poultry farm should be located
on sandy soil, if possible, as that is
the best for poultry, and should also
be where there is not much around
it to keep the fowls in an excited
condition. Quietness does much to
ward increasing egg production.
When poultry is made a specialty ev
it, the
be
conductive to the welfare of the flock,
and also toward their comfort 8,
P. M., in the National Poultry Jour
nal.
tion $10,000,000 annually.
and deterioration amount to as much
more, while eggs that have become
so bad as to be useful only for the
at=ical purposes amount to $5,080,000.
ed ———-—
NOTES.
Too early hatches are not best un
less one fs prepared to give the
chicks good care, but with good
coops In a sunny exposure, the early
hatches will pay well for all extra
trouble. and If chicks are well hatch:
ed, come out of the shells lively and
vigorous, they will stand a whole lot
of cold,
Damp weather and wind are very
hard on baby chicks, so a wind break
and comfortable coops should be a
part of all poultry equipment.
Provide good warm nests, and place
them Jn protected places, under good
rhelter, for the sitters. Tight boxes
wih abundance of dry nesting, will
be found to yield better hatches, let:
ter in numbers, and better in strength
of the chicka,
FLOORS OF POULTRY HOUSES,
The floor of a poultry house is a
subject that is very Interesting to
all poultry raisers and is also one
that is attracting more attention now
than formerly, says American Poul
try Advocate,
Your variety of floor depends
buildings. U. R. Fishel says, “Every
house on ‘Fishelton’ is provided with
pine flooring. Cement floors are a
nuisance. Nothing can equal the pine
floor covered with straw for the birds
to work In” Mr. Fishel's idea of
poultry house floors is based entirely
on the conditions surrounding his
houses. He must have some other
floor than an earth one.
Popularity.
“Ave they popular?”
“1 should say they are, They own
an automobile, a summer cottage and
a vaphtha launch.”—Detrois
Press
BATHOLITE
By Garrett P, Scrviss
i
There has lately been introduced
into scientific nomenclature a most
Imposing same, representing a con-
ception that almost staggers the im-
agination.
It is the Batholite, a term invented
by the great German geologist, BEd
uard Suess, to describe the gigantic
intrusions of molten rock which, ac
cording to him, bore their way up
ward through the crust of the earth
from the “eternal depths” below, cut-
ting through the strata and folds of
the mountains very much as a white-
bot soldering iron may be thrust
through a plank, burning its way
cross the grain of the wood as if it
were cheese,
These Batholites lurk deep in the
earth, where the temperature is thou-
sands of degrees, and gradually melt
their way to the surface above them.
tremendous domes of hot rock, tower
ing up to mountain heights, and of-
ten giving birth to volcanoes.
When a Batholite, as sometimes
happens, does not reach the surface,
its roof opens in a network of fis
sures, lava pours out and a whole
group of volcanoes appears at that
point
Suess has recognized
of many cooled Batholi
ous parts of the earth's surface,
be says that isolidated
of the earth the present
day, may be exposed to these mighty
intrusions from below
The Batholites bring up with them
many metals from the
planet, and rich mines
opened In the dykes that
formed
Sucss
the
tes
remains
on vari
and
the cor crust
even at
interior of the
are often
are thus
the abou!
ancient
square
But there are
prodigious in extent
they have been
to the general level,
old Batholite
elevation of
rock
an
5.000
describes
Boulder, Colorado. as
jatholite, which covers
kilometers of surface.
others still more
Sometimes
down nearly
near Elikhorr
towers up an
feet above the sea
The diamond dykes of South Africa
have thus been thrust up from the
profound depths of the earth, where
there exists a laboratory of nature
in which she performs what seem
miracles to the petty inhabitants of
the planet's surface,
The face of the moon shows us
most clearly what Batholites are cap
able of. The vast circular plains
ringed with steep mountains, hich
make its surface so marvellous to
look upon with a telescope, have, ac
cording to this view, been formed by
intrusions of colossal Batholites. and
Suess calls them by the startling
name of “smelting furnaces”-—fur
naces thousands of square miles in
extent-—-in which the frame of that
little world bas been melted and dis
solved like a snow bank lying in the
path of a flow of molten iron.
And if we could remove the sedi
mentary accumulations of ages from
the face of our world, says this as
tonishing German savant, we might
find now hidden under our feet a net-
work of the seared skeletons of an
cient Batholites, grander than any
on the moon’ Truly science has
found a new word to conjure with!
From the New York American.
Wasteful to Burn Grass.
The wastefulness of burning grass
is perhaps not generally realized. By
the burning of dead grass we remove
the material which 18 to furnish ho.
mus and bacteria essential for plant
growth. Resulting from this berning
we have temporarily a small amount
of ash, which stimulates a quick and
unhealthy growth of grass, but the
soluble parts of the ash are rapidly
washed away by rains, so that we
have not only a great loss from de
worn
but
yet
9.000
the
to
also a loss of part of the small val
uable residue land subjected
grass fire must therefore quickly “run
out” unless manure is added subse
quently to take the place of the burn.
York Times.
oS SL
Eucalyptus Trees.
With reference to the letter of “014
Australian” about eucalyptus
from sted for a numba of years,
them for more than two winters. 1
have only a small greenhouse, with
the frost usually kills them. 1 find
the plants good for hay fever or sim-
flar nasal trouble,
In the Botanical Gardens in the
Bronx they have a fine specimen of
the Pucalyptus Globulus, which is
the one | grow, but, of course, they
are better able to take care of it
than § am. Perhaps "Old Austra
lian” knows of a hardy specimen of
the “Globulus” that wopld resist a
moderate arount of cold -—W. Mac.
Over three thousand pounds of rose
petals are used in the manufacture
of one poxnd of attar of rose per
fume, :
The masculine girl naturally Yooks
uspast, ema the Philadelphia Reo
A Tame Den.
Legler, the baker, bent over his
counter, working away with a pen-
cil and a plece of wrapping paper,
when Mrs. Liscum entered for a loaf
of bread.
Noticing on the paper a& lot of
familiar names, Mrs. Liscum asked:
“What are you figuring there, Mr
Legler?”
“Well, ma'am,” says Legler, “I'm
just putting down the names of all
my friends that 1 can lick.”
"Is Harvey Liscum’s name there?”
gsked Mrs. Liscum.
“Yes,” said the
got it down.”
Mre., Liscum
Harvey He
baker. “Yes, 1
went home and told
hastened to the bakery
“Legler,” he sald, “is it true I'm
the list of men you can lek?”
‘Yes,” sald Legler calmly, “I've
you down, Mr. Liscum.”
you little shrimp,” roared
Liscum, "| could eat you alive!”
“Are you sure you could?” asked
the baker
“You bet I'm sure!” sald Liscum,
shaking his fist In Legler's face.
Well, then,” said the baker sad-
ly, “I guess I'll cross you off the
list.” Chicago Evening Post.
on
fot
“Why,
Children And The Grass,
One of the numerous good acts
of Mayor Gaynor's rule is that of
pulling wp the “keep off the grass’
Ligns in 20 New York parks and
opening these bits and patches of
sreensward to walled-in and housed.
up children of the great city. The
feet of the children will probably do
no injury to this New York grass,
and {If some of the turf is killed it
not die in a better cause. The
that the New York
actually gladdened by
romping feel.
the merils of Wash-
£ 80 MARY acres and
‘ and so many miles
greenery for all
of little
give joy
3 idden on the
tols can toddle on
and seek
} 3 Boy 8 cannot
rgy-back,” duck-on.
hare and hounds
gardens Parallel
ladders, jumpin
ke are 1s nited
Washington Star
feat
that
r forh
hide
to
Educating Royalty.
may or may
think it
it dosen't, it
not hedge
does, iL does;
Josen't. The
one opinion
girenuous and
holds anot her
ver gent opinions the
having the time
we
fm
house atmos.
It is Colonel
smash a few
the fresh air He
a number at Berlin, as
places, and the stifling
grandees s0 far from resenting it,
rather relis it
To flgr vain ceremonial, to
aside empty forms, to come
nn to the bedrock of essential fact
api the valve of the
hind the trappings and the
it a service that only
uld perform for an
German Bmperor
r to suffer from this
rut method
a facet
{ ) friendship
hich has been struck up withis
few days Chicago
» 14
rush
firaine
1 the
Record.
Doctor's Record.
Morris, who wag one
lical practitioners in
just died at Dumferm-
n he celebrated his jubilee
some ten Years ago he
this statement ‘During my
50 years in practice 1 bave attended
H0.000 patients, administered chioro-
10.000 times with absolute jm.
from fatal results, had 5.000
1.000 consecutive cases with-
out a death, made about 1,000,600
vigits and treveled about 500,000
miles.” Not a bad record for a coun.
try medical man Westminster
Gazelle
Robbing The Cradle.
Senator Beveridge was speaking te
an early morning crowd in Hunting-
ton, Ind., School bad not been calied
because of the Benator's visit, and
the school children were there with
the grown-ups
Two or three disgusted Democrats
walked by. scorning to stop and lis-
ten to the arguments,
“Huh!” one “Now what
do you think of that? They had to
let out school to get a crowd.” Sat.
urday Evening Post
No “Papoose” In His Vocabulary.
Teachor-——An Indian's wife is call-
ed an squaw Correct. Now who
can tell me what an Indian's baby
is called?
Bright
squawiker.
A Country
James
gE ywitor
made
form
munity
births,
sniffed
Pupil—1 know, miss—a
~-Boston Transeript.
-~
Particular
People.
Find positive plessure_in)
Post
Toasties
—a crisp,” appetizing, dainty,
fond op brcSiias, func or,
supper. ways uth
serve right from the
.milk,