The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 12, 1914, Image 5

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    Oficial Vous in Digirlots,
The following shows the official
figures of the vote cast for congression-
al and senatorial candidates in
various counties comprising the die-
tricts ;
Lhe
For Representative in Congress.
Centre county—Tobias, D,
Rowland, R, 3689; Ww,
Rittenhouse, 8, 171 ; McLarren, P, 172,
Clearfield county D, 4691;
Rowland, R, 4202 ; Mayo, 1606 :
Rittenhouse, 8B, 840; P
438
McKean county-—Tobias,
Rowland, R, 1859; Mayo,
Rittenhouse, 8, 283; MecLarren,
216
Cameron county—Toblas, D, 213:
Rowiand, R, 653 ; Mayo, W, 229: Kit-
tenbouse, 8, 10; McLarrer, P, 23,
The total vote cast in the district for
candidates was which
number Rowland received 10,403, and
Tobias 9339, the Republican
by a plurality of 1064,
The vote by parties is as follows:
Democratic, 9339 ; 10408 :
: 1304;
2063 :
a roa
Mayo, Qi
~ Tobias,
VW,
AY y
McLaren,
D, 1482;
Ww, 2166 ;
Pp,
26,571 of
all
all '
winning
Republican,
4574; Bocialis
‘rohibition, 951,
For Staite
Washington,
senator,
Centre county—Patterson, D,
Miller, R, Multhrop, W, 7
Maualtbrop, P, 149 ; Johnson, 8, 153,
Clearfizld county—Patterson
3707; Miller, R, 3029:
’
Multhirop,
2351; Multhrop, P, Juhnson
Sub
7 0 ;
Miller's total in the district is 7286 :
Patterson's total ia 6716, Republi-
of
tie
havin
Avil
can candidate
O69 ia the district,
£ & piuraiily
-
Saccessfal on First Usy's Hun’,
of
Coburn,
the
on
i¢
Poe
Harry Auman, 8 membes
railroad crew at
tae first day killed a
section
nice buck. i
was hunting by himself in Little
Valley.
William H. member of
the gets
er dit for bringing down the first buck
in party. It
fircat day and it is said to be a flue
specimen,
I'he Green party, be
burn, killed two on the first day,
he Woodland the
Homan, a i
Potters Mills Regulars’,
his was Killed on the
Brier low Co-
party, in Nar-
rows, have one deer,
A report fcom the lower part of the
the effect that a Mifllia-
Killed three deer oun the
county is to
party
opening day,
burg
Ihe Pleasant Gap hunters, at-Harry
Horner's §
Owing Lo
no
froin the Bradfords sand
IaC®, Lave oue dd
the remote |
Cuiilive
a f 1 ny
means Of Communic
have not been available,
—————— tp —— tp tpi
Electric Chair lustailed,
installed in
ro
Mou-
I'he electric CURIT Was
house a! the new weste
the death
pe
day
J
say when the firsl
at Rockview, on
iitentiary,
Penitentiary cflicials would not
electrcution would
said the
for the
The
house is built entirely of steel
for
ut Ii is CORIr
first
take
would probably be used
within a
place, 1
time mont, death
ana
concrete and has cells 8iX QOoL-
demuped prisoners,
ct
LUCAaLS
Bheridan Garis and Herbert Garis
are workiog ss ¢xtras on
section crew.
the local
OLD HATS PUT TO GOOD USE
Discarded Headwear Finally Winda
Up In Homes for the Aged :
and Unfortunate,
A man wearing a derby hat went
into a New York hat stose the other
day to purchase a hat. When he had
selected one that suited him he hand-
ed the clerk the money for the new
hat, together with the derby.
“Here, take this,” sald the purchas-
er. “I have some bundles to carry
home and I do not want to add any-
thing to my burden. Give me a check
and I will call in for the hat on Mon-
day.” ‘
The clerk gav> a check to the man
and then remarked to a customer who
had overheard the conversation:
“He will never return for that old
hat. It is so old that he wouldn't be
bothered carrying it home, so he de-
cided to leave it here, excusing his
act by declaring that he had other
bundles to carry. Giving him acheck
was just a mere formality; that's why
‘wo made up the checks out of cheap
material.”
“Men must leave.a large number of
old hats here in a season? inguired
the customer.
“Yes, they do,” responded the clerk,
“but we have a method of disposing
of them.”
“How?” inquired«the intorested:cus-
tomer,
“Well, we hold all the hats leftsus
until the end of the season. Then we
send them to old men’s homes, where
there Is always a demand for such
headgear. The officers of the institu-
tions divide the old hats among the
inmates, who are delighted to get
them. Isn't that a better plan than
throwing them In the waste heap?
Females of Many Species Leave to
Thelr Mates the Work of Rear
Ing the Young.
It 1s the male sticklebmck who
builds the nest; then goes out amd
drives the female in to lay ber eggsc
then straightway drives her out to
prevent her eating them; then puts
himself on guard to protect them from
their other enemies, until the young
shall hatch and be able to swim away
by themselves, declares a writer In
the Atlantic Monthly.
It is the male toadfish (Batrachus
Ta ) that crawls into the nestholo
and takes charge of the numerous
family. He may dig the hole, too, as
the male stickleback build; the nest.
I do not know as to that. But I do
know that I once raised m stone in
the edge of the tide along the shore-of
Naushon island in Buzzan!s bay, to
find its under surface cowered with
round, dropllke, amber cggs, and In
the shallow cavity bens<mth, an old
male toadfish slimy arsed croaking.
and with a countenance ugly enough
to tie a prowling eel into a hard knot.
I have done this scores of times. The
female deposits the eggs, gloes them
fast with much nicety to the under
surface of the rock, as a female raight,
and finishes her work. Departing at
once she leaves the confing brood to
the care of the male, who from this
time, without relief or even food in
all probability, assumes the role and
all the responsibilities of mother.
Sr
“Our bodies are what we eat” ds
serts an evening newspaper, and coi
tinues: “Our minds are what we
read.”
An exaggeration like this may sorve-
to emphasize the Importance of eating
Marriages GLloenses,
Ralph Bampeel, Benner Township
Beatrice Ray, Axe Mann
David Walker, Orviston
Dora Watkins, Howard
Willard Miller, State College
Alvina Wellar, Btate College
i ——— A ————
Too Much Athleticism.
“As guardians of the public health,
it is time for us to make a stand
against this athletic craze) writes a
medical correspondent. “The swing-
ing of ponderous clubs and dumbbells,
rowing heavy machines, pulling up
welghts, walking 16 or 20 miles a day
chasing a golf ball, ete, are needless
and injurious to anycne. As physi-
clans, we prescribe moderate exercise
for lymphatic and obese patients of
torpid temperament, and a few indi
cated movements to straighten up a
deflected spine or round shoulders,
ete, but we are careful to guard
against fatigue. Buch exercise is a
very different thing from the severe
and senseless efforts required by
teachers in gymnasties and exercise
fiends.
“If people would live long and
healthy,” says the correspondent,
“they should take their exercise under
the advice of a common-sense physi-
cian, The wrenching of muscles, ten-
dons, ligaments, joints, nerves and
bloodvessels,” he proceeds, “is giving
us all kinds of puzzling conditions,
traumatic neuroses, dislocated vis-
cera, ete, traceable to overexercise, If
we only knew where to look for it.”
Had Two Good Reasons.
Upton Sinclair sald the other day
New York:
“Everybody is jumping up and say-
ing that poverty, bitter and grinding
poverty, has nothing to do with
making girls go wrong. Well, for
my pert, I think that such assertions
are too charitable toward modern
social conditions, too charitable to-
ward modern employers.
“Such charity reminds me of the
young lady who asked:
“Did pretty Tottle Footlites marry
the septuagenarian Gobsa Golde for
love or money?
“For both' the young lady an-
swered charitably, and she added,
"Lottie loves money, you know." ”
in
Peculiar Japanese Frog.
The Japanese frog a creature
measuring botweeg fifteen and twenty-
five inches. The Win of its back Is
pale blue and by night dark
green olive brown re- |
mains motionless dur
is
looks
The frog
nE ar ©
eyes sheltered from th
belly up, clinging to its support by ad- |
hesive cushions and by its belly, which |
is prowided with a sticky
and it is hardly
the objects that surround it. At night.
fall it begins its hunt for the mam- |
moth erickets on which it feeds, ma |
ging leaps covering seven feet of
ground.—Harper's Weekly.
A Ml
Shall Me Bt He King 7
or
honor and women
I destroy ambition, ruin statgsmen-—and
th
they love me
ill insane asylums and prison hots
t= in hov
my
els and feed them on husks. Still
EY Ove 1}
their
mothers
beg me
Fathers give me
thelr sons,
i maidens their lovers and
isughters an
10 stay
Ww
Judges yiel
th one touch I uined great industries
ito my power and lawyers forget
1 10 plead,
SAL}
= RPHANE COURT
OF REAL ESTATI
In the matter o! the estate of Catherine
Shook, late of Gregg Township, deceased
the Orphans Court of Centre County
Pursuant to an order lssued by
Court of Centre County or ier 7th
ember, 1914, the unde hinin
Catherine C, Bhook, late of Grege Towuosd ae
ceased, will ¢ xpose to public sale, on
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5
wk p.m. on the
the following di sorilx
(
in
the Orphans |
day of Nov
strator of
ut one o'ele
No. 1,
Purpart No, 1-All that cert
ment or tract of land situnts
Gregg, County of (
vania, bounded and des :
Beginning at stake, thenes of Elils
snyder and J. G. Evans north ythires
grees east 110 pw £ On thence north
nineteen degrees hes 0 stone
in Penns Creek rid
twenty and six tenth perches to
Creek ;: thence north sixty-five
twenty-seven perches to stone in §P
thence south sixty-nine
perches to in Penns Creek ;
e'ghty-five degrees
tenth perches to stone ir
guth seventy-three de
to stone in Peuns Creek : thet
and one-half degrees
tenth perches U 1
iy land of A.J
thirty-eight j
reventy-three
tre
ewer degrees west
in Penns
degrees
BLO
pus Cr
q
degrees
wesl twer
perches to
cast fifty -thr
contaniog iX1)
perches more or |
therelr
Of contained
the property of Wi li
TERME OF BAL
ney to be
¢ nai
Clase 1
LER
CYRUS BRUNGART
JUSTICE OF THE PEACH
CENTRE HALL, PA
pecial attention gi
————— re
CLUY RIVED
i bw pre rt
Decay
Wr eln,
—
BIG LINE OF
No Larger Line will be
Offered in Pennsyalley
FOOTWEAR
First Quality ; I do not handle s
Rubber Footwear
Y
d
w Goods, all
srevnel rita}
Jiila 1di
“ie
oY
yt
itv, Get your
here at a
yerything
il
{
- a
TUSSEYVILI
.E, PA.
Sy
Ti
it mmm dd
ca 5
SAVESYOU
from $25 to
Clean Skimming
Easy Running
Light Running
Long Life
Few Repairs
John Mariz is considering the mat- | wholesome food and reading clean
books. Scientifically, it is valuel ess.
Mastication and digestion are proc ess.
ntial to getting the full val-
ue out of literature, as they are to got-
tiem With
A one toucl moder
i} destroyed great armie
The BEATRICE is the typical
ion above )
ter of giving up his work on the rail-
sud voting
his lime to the shoemakiug trade,
a
in two minutes, ( S:e illas
BEATRICE, wit!
farm ia this
Toad as & section baud die
£8 A8 e88¢ its ¢ Makes wasiing
patent
yaz kinl of deilly wrk, Comin aad s22
W. Harrison
Harry Fenlon,
t
represented Centre c
Walker, KE q., and
ageut,
return
judges io the congressiousl and sena-
torial respectively. The
judges wet in Clearfield on Tuesday,
ibsurauce
uuty as
districts,
George W. Erhard has given up the
idea of moving to Nebraska bpext
spring and instead will move from the
Bradford farm at Old Fort to the John
Hterret farm, located two miles east of
Milroy, one Lun-
dred and sixty acres and is at
tensnted by Howard Ripka,
Ihe farm contains
Lresent
Ap er ———
Aaronsburg,
Mise Bally Gulsewite is at present
under the doctor's care,
Mrs, Henry Foster and daughter
left for their Buflalo, N. Y., home,
Quite a few from town were to Mill-
beim Saturdsy evening and erjoyed
the entertainment, “The Minister's
Honeymoon "’, .
Mr, and Mra, E. G, Mingle returned
from a pleasant visit with Mr. and
Mra. George McCormick at Potters
Mills,
Mr. and Mrs. James Lenker and
daughter Sarah from Lemont came in
their car and spent Saturday with Mr.
Lenker’s mother and sister,
Mr, and Mrs. John Huckenburg and
two children from Milton
coms guests of their cousing,
Mra. L. E. Btover,
Mrs, Jane Decker will spend the
winter months at Woodward with her
brother Al,, who was brought home
from the Beliefonte hospital. 4
Harry Homan aud lady friend from
Madisonburg were entertained by his
parents, Mr. and Mrs, George Homan,
one day last week.
Mr. and Mrs, E. E. Ardry, Mrs,
Carson from Bellefonte and Mrs,
Merril from Philadelphia autoed to
this place Thursday and spent a short
time at the George Weaver home.
wre wel
Mr. and
ting the full value out of dinner. A
thoughtful man benefits more lar goly
from reading James Oppenheim or
Leonard Merrick than a fool does from
reading Meredith and Shakespeare. A
discriminating mind puts ome issue of
this paper to a better use than a slov-
enly mind can do with 75 monthly
magazines. We don't need to road
more half so much as we noed toarvad
more intelligently.
Settled Knotty Law Point.
Law Notes reports a case befbre a
justice of the peace in Oklahoma COfty
In which opposing counsel were en-
gaged In a spirited argument as to
whether a certain objection to the
Introduction of testimony should be
sustained by the justice. The justioo
tried to induce the attorneys to come
to an agreement on the question, and
one of them repled that ®t was im-
possible and insisted that the court
rule on the objection. The qoestion
was then rdpeated to the witness, and
the justice, after pondering the mat-
ter for some time, turned to the ob
jecting attorney and said, “To save
further. argument I will lot the wit
ness answer the question, but I will
not consider his answer.”
Individualism.
A condition of society that wAll per
mit the individual to acquire the full
measure of reward for labor, be fit
done with brain or brawn; that will
restrain the strong from mpinging
on- the weak; that will aurture a
kindly humanity for the belpless and
afllicted; that will not coddle in in
dolence the degenerate progeny of
worthy parents; that will assure to
the thrifty the necessithes and a far
share of the plensures «of Ife, and
yet permit of an accumub ation to-this
end; and that they may provide for
themselves and thelr dear ones
against the time of the lengthening
shadows, when the day's work shall
have been done~John §¥3. Mfller.
nn MIA
The Centre Reporter §1 50 per year.
\
’
ught
, aise a man to highest heaven and
ore I am wm
3 to deepest hell
1] mn Satan's
free iy,
asha med of m
My name is Rum,
leglo his work
cheerfully 3d without ¥, yet is
Adag
TF AL ESTATE AT PRIVATE SALE
The pu wlersigned offers for male the property of
Sarah Ann Horner, late of Potter town
de wased, lorated one-fourth mile south
siver. Said property consists of a good
sry log house, weather boarded, good bam,
WAREOND sh 1, and all ne comary outbuildings
There are wo never-feiling wells on the prem
jms: also a good young orchard About three
acres of lar a in good state of cultivation, Will
be sold at a Nery reasonable price
For furth er particulam inquire of, or addres
MRS. JOHN H. HORNER,
Spring Mills Pa, R. D, 4,
the ate
hit
ship
west of (
twoet
FRONT BACK
« Utterbeck "”’
Id zal Fruit Picking BAG
‘dade of heavy woight duck and so arranged
ue to eqt. Alle the lon oa bots Shouidum
ings are Arran, #0 bo ands can
lod o pleking, and the draw string ls arrang-
od ao the fruit can be let out at the tom in
SHERING | 6 beg | down doth ‘botiotm uf The
be lot down @
hax pao Py ning the dmw string, thus not
bruising te froit, i" ofan
his 16 best and handiest arrangemen
plats it 1it that hes ever been offered. A trial
will conviz oe even the most sk
Write For Prices To
and why it gets every drop of
mous spreaders.
buting on the ground.
it
barbed and smooth wire,
Must
Suit
You
a . a
proof, Low fuel
re: Case-harden
Bm.” We're back of t
our own reputation; we wouldn't
Fron
CLYMER McCLENAHAN, Centre Hall
-
Satisfaction Guaran=-
Your engine
keep it. “Your
That's the prin
1to 100 HL P,
All Types
LH
WEBER,
CENTRE HALL, PA.