The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 04, 1912, Image 6

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    a ——————
Dark.
Hewett—It is pretty cloudy,
Jewett—Yes, a sort of brunette day
S——————————n
ONLY ONE “BROMO QUININE."
That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for
Rhe signature of B. W. GROVE, Used the World
ver w Cure a Cold In Une Lay. 20.
Recalling the Fight.
“He has his father's eyes”
“That's queer; | thought I
blacking his.”
was
If You Are a Trifle Sensitive
About the size of your shoes, you can
Wear a size smaller by shaking Allen's Foote
tare, the antiseptic powder, into them.
Just the thing for Dancing Parties and for
Breaking in New Shoes. Sample Free.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. X.
Facetious Operator.
“1 say, mister,” said the cadaverous
man, entering the telegraph office,
“could you trust me for a telegram I
want to send my wife? I'll pay you
tomorrow.”
“Sorry sir,” sald the operator, “but
We are terribly rushed these days and
there isn't a tick in the office that
isn’t working overtime as it 18." —Har.
per's Weekly.
——————————————
Cursory.
A huntsman called on Hodge to set-
tle damage done by a rum to
hounds, and found only Mrs. Hodge at
home
“Has your husband,” he
“made an examination yet?”
“That he have, sir,” replied
Hodge, with a courtesy,
“Rather a curscry examination,
suspect.”
"Oh, dreadful, sir! Such langwidge
I never heerd—never!'" And the good
woman held up her hands at the bare
recollection —Judge
for
inquired,
Mrs.
When to Call the Doctor.
When to summon the doctor is =
point which has probably puzzled most
People at one time or another, but in
the of throat and intestinal
troubles there should be no uncertain.
ty, says a medical authority. The doc-
tor should be summoned at for
the sore throat may be diphtheria, and
the intestinal symptoms may mean
peritonitis, appendicitis or any one of
a dozen complaints of se char
acter. Valuable time and the golden
opportunity may be by wait.
ing for symptoms severe
enough to doctor
case
once,
rious
wasted
that are
11
at iP “ey vg $
Justify calling the
Sunshine.
Burround the children
possible cheer .
laughter cost nothing
children have
pictures, |
them have a good
time, but one full
tion Surround
beautiful things
should be given
with every
Smiles and
Let the
have
let
idle
let
have
music, them
them laugt
time: not
of
them with
you can Plants
sun and air and the
blue sky; give them to your boys and
girls. | not mean for a day or a
month, but for all the years. We can-
not plant one day
and harshly the next day; they cannot
stand |t Burbank, in “The
Training of the Human Plant.”
cheorfu upa
all the
orl
do
treat a tenderly
Luther
Love Matches,
"Miss Marie Corelll, like all female
novelists, is a firm believer in marry-
ing for love”
The speaker,
an’'s magazine,
Colony club
tinued, a nut
her mouth:
“l argued and wrangled
matches with Miss Corelli!
day in her old-fashioned Stratford
home, but rather got the better
of me, at the end with an epigram
. who marries for love, Miss
Corelli sald, with her
eyes shut. She who marries without
love enters hell with them open.’
an editor of
was taking
New York
sandwich
a wom
the
con
near
fea at
She
in
in
poised
about
whole
aw
ove
One
she
She
‘enters heaven
SHE QUIT COFFEE
And Much Good Came From It
It is hard to believe that coffes will
put a person la such a condition as it
did a woman of Apple Creek, 0. She
tells her own story:
“I did not belleve coffee caused my
trouble, and frequently sald 1 liked
It 50 well 1 would not quit drinking it,
even If it took my Mfe, but I was a
miserable sufferer from heart trouble
and nervous prostration for four years
“1 was scarcely able to go around at
all. Had no energy, and did not cars
for anything. Was emaciated and had
A constant pain around my heart until
I thought I could not endure It }
felt as though I was liable to die any
time,
“Frequently I had nervous chills and
the least excitement would drive glee
away, and any little noise would up
get me torribly. 1 was gradually get
ting worse until finally one day, #
came over me, and I asked mysel!
what Is the use of being sick all the
time and buying medicine so that }
can Indulge myself In coffee?
“80 1 thought 1 would see if I could
quit drinking coffee, and got some
Postum to help me quit. 1 made ft
strictly according to directions, and
I want to tell you that change was the
Ereatest step In my Ife. It was easy
to quit coffee because | had the
Postum which I like better than 1
liked the old coffee. One by one the
old troubles left, until now 1 am In
splendid health, nerves steady, heart
all right, and the pain all gone. Never
have any more nervous chills, don’t
take any medicine, can do all my
housework, and have done 8 great
deal besides.
“My sister-inlaw, who visited me
Rhis summer had been an invadid for
some time, much as | was. | got her
%0 quit coffee and drink Postum. She
®alned five pounds In three weeks,
and I never saw such a change in any-
one's health.”
“There's a reason.”
Ever read the above letter? A new
ane appears from time to time. They
Bre Kemuine, true And full of human
res
jours,
ant,
Proposal
———————
Story of Interpolations in the
Easter Anthem
ERKINS
lewis
s
Kins
sat beside
choir
r. Per.
and
bad
two
In the
sang
gang
in the
baritone,
alto They
choir for
she
Sang
Years, and
& polite act at
fer
practice
This got to be a
until evening
peculiar shock
naturally it was
the first for
to her home afte
escort Choir
habit with
experienced a
$ ppear-
one
ther 4 n a
ed at the choir rehearsal and liatened
with
ing. and
with Miss Lewis
Shocks of this
16 young man in love
takes the affair in
of course way
evident enjoyment to the sing-
then calmly walked away
gort are salutary
Withou
eh
a
t th
he
matter
drifts.
The drifting lover is not a satisfac.
tory one to a girl. The tide of his af
fection may be smooth enough, but
does not get anywhere lke
the ambitious, aggressive man
And certainly, from the
too mu of a
He
Women
tion are never more aptly
than in the effort to win her hand
Winning a hand is different from hold
ing It as though It were
property.
The other man was Hollleker Hol
leker was a n%an who formulated a
campaign as soon as he decided upon
its object.
Consequently he had maneuvred so
that Perkins had had mighty few mo-
ments with Miss Lewis
And she enjoyed it. No matter how
much a girl thinks of a man, she must
enjoy his desperation and despair
when he sees another man apparently
winning her away from him. It is this
elusiveness In woman nature that con-
stitutes a large part of her human na-
ture.
Perkins wanted to propose now,
badly enough. But he needed the
chance. This Easter morning when
the choir arose to sing the anthem he
looked over the congregation and he
gritted his teeth when he saw Hol
licker sitting right In the Lewis pew.
Mechanically be took up his part of
the anthem, and as he sang an in.
aspiration came to him. He and Miss
Lewis had sort of a recitative second
part to the solo during most of the
anthem. The soprano carried the alr
i and held all the attention of the audi.
| ence, and the deep tohes of the organ
| effectually hid the words the baritone
| and Miss Lewis dang.
Instead of the words on the page be-
fore him he touched her elbow with
his and softly sang:
“Am I never to have a chance
Never to have a chance
A chance to speak to you alone:
She glanced at him almost with
alarm. Bhe could not belleve she had
heard him aright. He returned her
glance and again sang:
“1 mean what I say.
Listen to ms,
do you mean?™
it was his time
1 he leaned a bit
ory well.
Well —
Ip her part of the ant} am
in ber meliow alto tones at once with
EI Ne
Kine
i mean?™
Was the moment fer the cholr to
£ into the finale. The Organ was
booming and the singers were begin
ning to fortissimo Perkins
ih}
passages
Pr
“I Will! Will—But Do Not Klss Me
Here—Not Here.”
book and
He sang:
slipped his hand under the
caught her fingers in his.
“This is my only chance.
Say that you will wed me.
0, say that you will wed mae,
Will wed me.”
There was an answering pressure
on his fingers, and with a demure
smile on her lips she answered:
“1 will
I will,
But do not kiss me here
Not here.”
As the congregation was leaving
Hollicker came to Miss Lewis and
sald:
“I must congratulate you on the ex.
pression you gave to your part of the
music this morning.”
“80 must 1.” Perkins declared. “And
while you are about it, you might as
well congratulate us both.”
WILBUR D. NESBIT,
An Easter Thought.
His wife's clothes are an index to a
man's prosperity,” says the succinct
philosopher,
“Lots of times they are an tpdex to
chapters that no longer exist,” replies
the man with the thoughtful eyes.
or
EXPERIMENTS IN GOOD ROADS
Present Efforts May Lead to Discoy-
ery of Binding Material That
Is Quite Essential,
The efforts to obtain a durable bin
to avold, and may, by the slow
cess of elimination, lead to the dis
covery of the binding material that is
80 essential to road making the
Sent
There is nothing yet known in this
country,
pro
at
time,
nor vet in France, where a
Eystem of 18.000 miles of
i8 under constant,
tha
iederal road
scientific
withstand the double
vision, will
effect ol and
ut if
will
is certain
horsedrawn vehicles
Pneumatic-tired
there
motor cars
18 any eombination that
meet these require: its, it
to be brought to lig}
by just the
in Camden
Newark
some day, and
kind of experiments made
and elsewhere,
News
BAYS
16
In Vermont and in Massachusetts
is ab indant, the
of
where crushed stone
roads that are made good gravel
appear to be giving good satisfaction
In the first place they have the
ed merit of being much
All Inacadam road
very
decid cheaper
tt and they seem
] vi Sagan Ba y
to require less scientific :
Material and Hold It Until Ra
leased Into Wagon.
deser
ibing
WARONSE manure
A
on wheels
by a team
i
ost of
rds or corrals.
vert nted
and adapt 0 be hauled Vv
vertical
¥
» frame to be read
ft In
£ A lever
in the fr
end is provided with
turned to right and Ie front
beam constitutin
long
swings I
vertically
se front
Manure Loader.
a fork and
take up manure and
upon a wagon. Means provide for
releasing the fork and devices and
for hauling out the material on the
fork from the great body of material
before the lever is tilted to raise the
load.
Getting Into Hard Soil.
In raising a gooa crop it must be
conceded that traction farming is far
ahead of farming done with animal
power. It is a well known fact and all
agricultural authorities agree that
deep plowing and the packing of the
subseoll produce a better crop than is
possible with the ordinary method of
shallow plowing.
It is almost an impossibility to plow
deep with horses and the common
horse plow because the entire outfit
is too light to get down into hard
80il. On the other hand. an engine
| 18 heavy and strong enough to secure
| good results. At the same time it is
| far cheaper, to plow with an engine
than it is to plow with horses.
————————
Fertilizing Malt Barley.
On light soils many European inves.
| tigations have chown that the addi-
| tion of fertilizers containing relatively
| large amounts of potash is productive
{of a heavy grain rich In starch and
| poor in protein, a graln well suited
| for malting purposes. Phosphatic fer
{ tilizers have a similar effect on. the
| grain,
i RH —————
i Selection of Seed.
By a careful selection and sultiva.
I ER
United States Department of Agricul:
ture Is Urging People to Protect
Native Songsters.
The United States
| agriculture 1s urging
parts of the country to do everything
in their power to attract and protect
our native song birds. In the winter
this may be accomplished by feeding
the birds when the land is locked in
department of
People in all
|
|
|
Protected Against Cats.
Bnow In
jurged tc put up nesting boxes
the
rear their
ice and spring people
birds may make their ho
In sur
little feathered neighbors
to shield
the attacks of cats.
Are you going t
the bird protectors
You are now {a the
loyalty to your
Make some nesting he
them
mes
young nmer
need hum
protection thelr young
0 join the ranks
of this land?
time to show
feathered fr
Your
fends,
UBECS Bnd pet
up at
and
places
The song bird
beginni
once
B are
here they
i ]
Made From Tree Limb.
cutting a hole in it for a doorw ay. For
{ blue birde make the
| about } size of
is intended for
When doors
enirance he
1¢
ii
le
the he
make ft
irger than
quarter
{ box Wrens
| smaller are ls
the sizes mentioned BpDarrows are
to inhabit them
the most tenants and
have been known to utilize
tin cans, old shoes, large funnels. or
any that is nailed se
curely to a post or wall.
i
|
|
Necessity for Testing Seed,
the Key
corn
Blue birds are a:
desirable
&8 houses
other receptacle
Good seed cor
| ting good
| stand of corn is necessary to secure
good yields Owing to the wet fall
| of 1811 there is now much doubtful
| seed corn in the country
One cannot afford to plant corn any
year, much less this year, without
testing The singleear method of
testing seed corn is the oniy prac-
tical method
————
Good Road's
6 FarmNotes
Test your seed corn before plant.
ing.
Cold water is practically useless fo:
removing bacteria
Weeds cause an annual loss of many
millions of dollars
The best fertilizer for the garden is
rotted stable manure
Coarse manure from the horse stable
is the kind to put in the hotbed.
Good seed is one of the important
factors in the production of good
crops,
When rhubarb grows rank and spin.
dling it needs thinning out and work:
ing over.
The «ilo correctly used will solv
the question of profit from $100 »
acre land.
The silo is the only safe and sur
way and the cheapest way to handl
the corn crop.
Generally speaking, *he depth
plant should be four times the diam
eter of the seeds.
Know whether a plant requires
situation dry or moist, hot or coo!
funny or shady to know where to put
that plant.
There are very few farms on which
additional labor expended in preparing
the seed bed would not yleld hand.
n
stands
in fo
get.
A good
of
A A a sss
tion a Kansas farmer produced 800
bushels of oats from an eightacre
fleld: an average hy weight of 100
oushels to the acre, It is all sound and |
*f the very highest quality, :
some returns,
Rotation of crops is one of the sim.
ple, practical methode of increasing
the productivity of the farm and dis
tributing lsbor,
Trcubles Lald to “In-Law.”
“The cause Of more than half the
family scraps that are scrapped to a
finigh,” says an exchange, “is the ‘In
law.” A man or a woman marries some
one absolutely antagonistic to all the
other members of the family, and
then, putting this person on a pedes.
tal, demands that all shall do or
his will For the sake of courtesy,
often a whole family will yield many
points, gradually the ‘in-law’ be
Comes and more insistent, and
80 things drift along, always the one
glde giving in, unt!]! some straw, some
trifie, drop too much,
and after fracas With the
alr cleared, a beginning can be made
Over again on a basis of equal rights,
or else all intercourse ceané, El
ther way much has been gained ”
her
and
more
will prove
that
the
the
can
Putty.-Head Hard to Penetrate.
Napoleon sald the
hardest iHery ever egsaved
was the in
Egypt It shell as
desert gE why
Bonaparte once
task his art
reduction of a mud fort
absorbed
the absort rain Chat
utty- headed ARCS yOu
the head
make
i
8
ng
arden like
ily punc-
“1 Object to
soothing
sleep but 1
Friend relies
and keeps }
till bed
Giving My Baby
ss that 1
remedic put h'm
to
opp’s Baby's
teething
fir
time
joy Closing Years
+ f "
a J 4 5 5 I
Eve Sails A ¥ on, Tee and HN
Remedy Co. Chicago
Murine Eye
Meagure
1
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully eve ry bx
CASTORIA, a safe sure remedy for
and .
infants hildren, and see that it
Bea
i ”r
Signature of i Ll Zens
In Use For Over 30 Years
Children Cry for Fletcher's
ttle of
rs the
astona
The Reason
You mark all your
. fend
ied the ox
nt have any
¢ od
orte said the
fy
Yes . rep
wv ho
ple live in flats
played softly .
Sure Does,
“The pen is ht
sword.”
But the
the pen.”
ry
ai
ivpewriter
For people to live happily
the real secret is that they
live too much toget
Helps
together
should not
her Arthur
Rir
For Constipation. Billoustess. Liver and
Kidney Troubles, take Garfield Tea
An old toper is satisfied if be can
keep his head above water.
TWO WEEKS’
TREATMENT AND
MEDICINE FREE
80 matter what your disease If you suffer
from Rheumatism write. If you suffer from
Kidney Trouble, write. No matter what
you suffer from, write to
MUNYON'S DOCTORS
834 and JeWerson Sts. Philadelphia, Ps.
NOT A PENNY TO PAY
Offer Is Good for the Next Thirty Days