THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. THURSDAY, MARCI ‘BAVARDS FARRWELL Our Ambassador Banqueted by London's Lord Mayor. A REPRESENTATIVE GATHERING, All Branches of Great Hritain's Ruling Powers Represented in the Tribute to Our Representative—Mr., Bayard's Re. sponse to the Lord Mayor's Speech, London, March 3.-~Not In many years has the Mansion House contain ed a gathering representative British life and achievement as sembled last night to honor Mr ard. Lord Mayor Phillips was ularly anxious that the company vited to dinner should represent ranks of distinguished life at in the metropolis, and though the fact that the house of commons was in ses sion prevented the speaker and members of the government nd Mr. Balfour and Mr from participating, and the the lord chief justice, the left nothing desired fre point of 1 the retiri The was Phillips head of 80 of as ay- parti in all present some ably Chamberlain absence of vie inter 1 WARS red ef cheering hour, and emotion as which hoped tions, Four position Britain sough of politics Was triotic as and © Xo to oa a trus should be “And,” he high trust fer. My clearer what humanity *between (re States There whatever f countries rent of fee peoples are also spoke terms to Another Veto Urged. New York March ; President Cleveland was sent the following gram lay ask you to refuse you sundry civil ag shall contain any forest regervatic your executive a great be devastation mous public main shou ish gram Charles 8. Fairchi ard and eight yester i The Sherr M. She citizens and vate WAS gned id, E other iward leading Long Day's Work for Congressmen, Washington. March Both h remained In session unt the of after in The house amendments to the monetary bill fore adjournment passed the appropriation bill The curred in the senate's amendment of $1,085,000 CONEress midnight ei inti oc) session until § 0 ClOCK lower house this m agreed int senate yesterday ermations conference and just be house Con bounty sugar General Lee's Possible Successor, Chicago, March 3 The Tribune pub Hashes the folowing The next general from the United States to Ha vana may be a Chicagoan. Richard 8 Martin, pastor of the Western Avenue Methodist Episcopal church, Is said t« have assurances that President-elect McKinley may appoint him to the po sition now fllled by General Fitzhugh Lave MARCH. 1897 1(2/3!14(5|6 8/9/10/11/12{13 16/17 18 19/20 27 Yo 7 14/15) 19 9122) 23 2425 26 28/29(80(81 | E— _— STRUT Si——— wh ———— “ MOON'S PHASES. oi. | Can 18 Pgraner 11 am | Of 08 | ¢ Joni, 25 J | Greece 18 8 | less | command being disregarded gathering | direct deficiency | George BB | 69 consul | THE WARNING TO GREECE. Must Withdraw Vessels and Troops from Crete Within Six Days, Athens’ March 3.-The representa- tives of the powers presented identical notes yesterday government t declare of will be converted completely into an autonomous state, under the suzerainty of the sultan, and demands that the Greek vessels and troops withdrawn within days, The says the entirely upon a action to put wns not but gravely Europe that un occurs afternoon to the Greek that the Island Crete he six note powers of which It to prevent that are agreed an end to a within thelr which if compromise course situation power ntinued, the emnly would of warned peace id withdrawal within six days the will hesitate to take any necessary to enforce it lon Is irrevocable Major Bor, the British reorganizer of the gendarmeri in Crete, offered 60 mu- three wages. On their the offer he their arms un body the afores powers not coercive and thelr steps decis months’ accept tineers third refusal to dered them to yield up Russian sallo the door of the | where the mutine Wet Fhe Italian and to force oj © New Method of Casting Copper, egisiators Off for Washington, Great Britain's Growing Navy. ion, March The statemer the rat lord rally George NAvY mates for 1897-95 The 190.000 the tieship= ast r expenditures | being last year's st Four 1 a an in 5 Ou three t} torpedo Me ya More Saceesses for Pritiah Invaders. March Niger company George Go of lHorin Brass the Sir expe captured town days ing. 8 re losses the After capital of Nupe« were natives capturing expedit ed against the emir WAS ARO ptur i territo Niger will place a larg control of the Leading Religions Editor Dead. New York March The Fle ory editor of The rday, aged was graduated in the clas of Divinity school For two professor sf Man died here vests Mallory Churchman years. Dr from Trinity college 1868, and from Berkely at Middletown, Conn years afterward he ancient languages at Trinity 1864 to 1872 had the chair of and oratory In 1866 he became « of The Churchman which he owned at the time of his death in 1862 WAS and from Hterature tor also Interesting Mining Statistios Shamokin, Pa March 3.-The an nual report of the Seventh anthracite district for the year ending Dec, 31 15806, has just been completed by Mine Inspector Brennan, It shows that the 47 mines produced 6.600.060 tons of coal, a decrease of 06.000 tons from the pre ceding year. Employment was given to 20.195 men and boys an average of 170 days each. There and 27 orphans An Absconding Naval Paymaster, Newport, R. I, March 3.-Naval Pay- master Corwine, who has been on duty here, has absconded, and has taken his check book with him. It is stated that he cashed a check for $5,000 last Sat. | urday, and has not been seen since, In- structions have been given for his ar- rest, and the navy department is tak- ing all possible steps to Intercept him and to prevent his cashing any fur. ther checks. were 76 fatal and 108 | non-fatal accidents, creating 21 widows | ' A WEEK'S NEWS CONDENSED Tharsduy, Feb, 25, five persons have mile and a half The skeletons been found about a from Bayside, 1. 1. Charles strel the old and time a theatrical died last night of heart disease, Mrs rived yester to We President Kruger, of the Transvaal, wants the high court of the South Af rican republic put under the volksrand 188 ary in of attempts of Cecll Rhodes to undermine the republic ‘ullender time at min known well in ane manager Chicago children their Princeton (N. J.) home Mrs land will return shington for Inauguration Cleveland and her nt Are Cleve the gays it NeCess view the Friday, Feb, 260, lectured and William J Haven tically in New enthusias Bryan night greeted Dr. Fridtjof Nansen, Artic ex: to country next Ambassador his to last was the lecture Norwegian arer, Is in this fall to Italy leave McVeagh i Home on family will return to America n Chi and Feb, Saturday, Monday, March Tossday, Mareh wr \ . MACY *Rg to death Wedneaday, March 3, wed Cuban flit Barnet, N. J, 10.000 rails A supp pedition left istering ex yesterday oad min Garrett mitted su Pa dying Cray ¢ near Se Just before grocer of East Orang» his fatal in) had Ix his wife declared uries caused by en have urg as ambas Berlin McKinley Uhl American resider { pet i Ing the retent sador STOCK AND PRODUCE MARKETS Closing Quotations of the New York and Fhiladelphia Exchanges, New York, March 2 The stock market openad with a show of strength, but yielded fore long to the effort of a marked depresdon in New Jersey Central. The depression spread through the general rallway list and Sagar and Chicago (Gas were also down a marked fraction in sympathy. Closing bids Balto. & Ohio « 15 Lohigh Valley Chesa. & Ohio 17% New Jersey On Del. & Hudson New York Cen D.L&W Pennsylvania Erie Reading Lake Eric & W 81. Pan) Lehigh Nav W.NY&Mm "All aant’s paid sent a Mr to Gern General Marketa, Philadelphia, March 2. «Flour quiet; winter superfine, BIN; do extras, ROBAD Pennsylvania roller, clear, $4.1084.25: do. do straight, MEBL0; westorn clear, #41004 2 | eity mille, extra, SL06@250. Wheat higher; No | red, spot, Ble. Corn flrmer: No | WR @2'ee. Hay dull; cholow timothy, $14 for large boles. Boeof steady | beef hams, $18. 758190. Pork dull; family, $I0@1l. Lard easy; western steamed, 34.2%. Butter steady | western cream | ory, 11@1%c. (do. factory, Tie, : Bigine, 190. ; | imitation creamery, @10o, ; New York dairy, 10@18e. ; do. creamery, ISI. ; fancy prints Jobbing at 2i@%e,; do. extra, wholesale, 20 | Choose quiet ; large, D81200. ; small, $8120. ; | part skims, Sage. | full skims, SE. Eggs | dull; New York and Pennsylvania, 160. ; west | ern fresh, 18%. ; southern, 144@ 150 Live Stock Markets, New York, March 2 Oabifs rote Amerioan store at 100,@11¢0., dressed: weight | sheep at { #110. ; refrigerator beef at M@#%o. Calves ao tive, steady ; veals, 507.25, and lambs RR. ): lamba, #4. Hoge freighter 1807. 3 WOOD WAS SCARCE. HOW THE FREIGHTERS ON THE PLAINS DID THEIR COOKING. A Gentleman Out Hunting Had an Oppor. tunity to See How os Plainsman Prepared ® Meal With Fuel Which He Carried With Him In Small Chunks, It was in the days before the rail roads had been pushed out through northwest Nebraska, and supplies wero freighted into the forts trading posts in big wagons, pulled sgmotimes by eight or ten yoke of oxen and some- times by one gpan of great mules It was evening when we overtook the freighter, We went into camp within 100 yards of where he stopped. It was almost at the head of the Elkhorn river, and the stream, where it flowed a few rods from our camp, was hardly more than a yard wide, The guide had told us at the start that we should strike country where we could find no wood, a small oil and and we had brought along | stovh, with a tin oven und a big can of When 1 and staked night, I wandered He had an « by two giant mules our the the wagon, He ana was getting suj I had ever wan and I staid had watered them out over kerosene, for tO BoB horses normous pulled had yO pine tim Each plece rep meal. He was split. them when I struc camp st y '* he said ithout look- ing up 1 wotin fer land? HN "Oh, intonation that seemed to convey hi seling that he knew all ¢ it © Ho had split the j f pine a handful of into a ball and could f it he it he into little stick dry grass and wi Then he beat dows } cleared a little t here he make his fire n the middle put the piled It was ready for the mato! at the end of his wagon he x a long handled steel frying pan, a coffee- pot and a tin can that looked as if it had once held two pounds of tomatoes or pie apples. 1 he brooght ont a wooden box and set it on the ground. It | served as a K THER hen table u it he k some flour and bacon and a little tin can of coffee. He got amill out of the box and ground his coffee. He was very particular about his coffee, he said to me, half apologetically He couldn't endure the ready ground stuff. When be bad got that done, he sliced his bacon. Then he got a sheet of tin out of the wagon and stood it up be hind the little pile of stic helped the heat acting as a ka to concentrate by reflector He put the coffes in pot, poured in some from the bucketful he bad brought from the river, and set it down beside the pile of sticks. Then be arranged the slices of bacon in the fry. ing pan and settled it on top of the pile of sticks. Then he lit his fire. In a min- ute it was blazing up meitiiy, aud the bacon was sizzling in the pan. He pour- ed some flour into the tomato can, dumped in a pinch of salt and some bak- ing powder and stirred it all up vigor- ously with a spoon. Occasionally he stopped stirring to turn the bacon. Pres ently the bacon was done. He fished it out into a tin pie pan with a fork, and into the hot grease he poured the mix ture of flour and other things from the tomato can. That was going to be "bull whaoker's bread,’’ or “‘scrugene.’ As soon as he took the frying pan off the fire he put the coffeepot on, and when the thick, stiff dough was nicely smoothed out in the frying pan he prop ped it up in front of the fire, where the reflector would do its best work. Then out of the wagon he hauled a jug of sorghum. Three or four more little sticks of pine were deftly arranged un- der the coffeepot, and by that time the bread had begun to brown in the pan. He took the pan by the end of the long handle and gave it a quick sidewise twist and a little forward jerk. The mass of half baked dough slid out of the pan and flew up into the air. It turned bottom wide up, and he caught it as deftly as any French cook catching pan- cakes, and propped the unbaked side up against the fire. By the time it had baked the coffee was boiling, and the meal was ready. He drank the coffee, strong and black, out of a tin cup and used sorghum for sweetening. Butter and lard ho despised. Hissorghum took the place of the one and the bacon grease served as substitute for the other. When he took the coffeepot off the fire, ho put on a little can of water that stewed and simmered and presently boiled over the embers. That was his dishwater. He had to have it hot to take the bacon grease out of his pans. And when it was all done, there were three or four of the little pine sticks still left. I asked him if he did not want pota- the water | toes, Yes, ho said, and he had them, 2 mixed, | Oats steady ; No. 2 white, spot, 28 | but only when firewood was plenty. It took too long and too much wood to cook potatoes, and he couldn't do it when he had to depend on one pine stiok to cook his meal. In the morning, before we had water- od the horses, he had cooked his break- fast and was off up the trail. —New York Sun. On the Bla, “Did yon read that story about “The | House on the Bluff?’ *' asked the Literary boarder. No," answered the cheerful idiot. “What was it—a boarding house? e Indianapolis Journal There are children without food. They cry for it, and are not an- swered. The pity of it! But often nature cries out in other ways that her children need nourish- ment. Is your child thin; actually poor in flesh? Does it get no benefit from ite food? Then give something which produces flesh and makes rich blood. LE Se Se Se So Se Se SCOTT'S ¢ EMULSION ee SS pe SS el Se pn LSE pn So ph SU en So gf SU of EF of SF oF 88 JUST AS GOOD IS NOT SCOTT'S EMULSION. CL SPD AWECDLPO DSWD