Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, July 30, 1908, Image 3

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    iauk 2
-
—
OME NAMES
Charles M. Daniels and
His Swimming at the
Olympic Games Senator
Warner of Missouri.
DANIELS,
C.
plonswimmer, who
fol
the
Olympic games
England, break
the Olympie reco
in the 100
swim, ha
SD
”\ - rl Sd
HARLES M
cham
honors
ut
won
America
in
rd
meter
nt day |
After a careful
strokes
Danie
of his
practicing
racing
sults
are used In
Finally he came t«
the crawl
the best or
spe
use
Is p in Ty ce certain id
he had gained
learned the English
compared {ts re
other strokes that
various parts of the world
tha
He
and
own while
stroke
with several
» the conclusion that
y trudgeon strokes were
ise in racing
Bishop Henry Codman
called forth
I
CRRA EL
FLITE r——
BISHOP HENRY CODMAN POTTER
man)
ym]
1
t States senate
very
had g
wou
nn
rk rom
interview
nt
tel
er fArst assignme
nntment by
f
ft of of
her engage
How
t"
to be on time
rrived she found
He cor
dially Invited her to be seated and In
quired as to the exact nature of the
nformation
Then In his characteristic manner he
dictated his statement. After the re
porter had finished writing she cour
teously offered to read what she had
written. The bishop insisted that he
knew It was correct and allowed it to
£0 without hearing it
As the reporter arose to take leave |
she sald graclously: |
“1 thank you, Rishop Potter, and
appreciate how much It means for a
busy person like yourself to give your
time to reporters.”
Patting her the shoulder
fatherly manner, he replied
“My dear little woman, we are both
earning our living."
The breadth of Bishop Potter's views
was Indleated In the following recent
utterance in reply to a question as to
the present religious outlook
welve her
desired
on in »
!
“1 am persuaded,” he sald, “that the |
movement of religious thought
in all lntds Is a movement progressive
A great many communions are unload
ing formulnries or dogmatic state
ments which are characteristic efforts
£3 substitute an Infallible book for an
infallible man, the modern scholar hav.
Ing realized that no revelation can
really have a divine author unless it
is progressively [lluminative. This Is
the point to be made clear by such a
discussion. Personally 1 am in no
| Joyed
| bar the civil
! nominee of his party for governor.
today |
“1A company
| He stood between the lines of the op
toward a larger light and higher ideals. | “
| of
doubt as to the future triumphs of the
SNe HE emily
{| George Bernard Shaw and His Satir- |
6
In the News
Bishop Potter's Kind
Heart His Successor,
the Right Rev. David
H. Greer. A y
LL
Ho
AN Gg -
Christian religion to Its su
preme adaptation to the wants of man,
but that it wlll have to go through
great modifications In many doctrinal
statements and dogmatic positions is
undoubtedly true.”
nor as
The
D., LL
become
Right
D.,
the
fer as end of tl
Rev, David H. Greer, D
bishop coadjutor, who will
of Pot
New diocese,
Pres 1
BUCCOSSOr Bishop
York
i pos
LA
y to his 1900,
office
COPYRIGHT BY ROCK WOO DR=NY,
BISHOP DAYID R
in
Hberal
GREER
the
‘
ng the rect
usefulness largely duri rate
of Bishop Greer, which extended from
{ the year 1588 to that of his consecra
| thon as bishop
log,
He was born in Wheel
W. Va, In 1844 and studied at
Washington college Pennsylvania
at the Episcopa
Lh)
and
bier
is
| seminary at Gar
Willlam Warner of Missouri
of
the « m charged
of notifying Wi
of his nomination for
to United
to succeed Francis Mar
fon Cockrs and the first Re
publican to be sent to the senate fr
Missouri for over a quarter of a
tury was the outcomes
wit Nena
Was
14 tie
with the duty Judge
lam H. Taft
president, was
elected the
was
"
tor Ww
bor:
4 ! ten
began to make his
own living
working In
In five
had saved
to give l
Years in «
the
tion
taught
ha
A store
years he
Mo gh
mself tw
lege, all
higher educa
he has
school
SENATOR WARNER en
Then he and
studied law
Just after he was admitted to the
war broke out, and he
Joined the Thirty-third Wisconsin vol
unteer Infantry, rising to major. After
the war, in 1865, he settied In Kansas
City, Mo, then a frontier village. He
has practiced law there ever since, hav.
ing been recognized as one of the lead
ers of the bar,
He has been active In polities
throughout his career and has been
city and clreult attorney, mayor,
United States district attorney, mem
ber of congress and an unsuccessful
In
1888 he was commander in chief of the
A. BR, and President Roosevelt of
fered him the post of pension commis
sioner, but he refused it
At the surrender of Vicksburg, July
4, 1863, Major Warner was captain of
In a Wisconsin regiment
posing forces and read the Declaration
Independence ns the soldiers
marched He was cheered by both
Federals and Confederates,
Her Aim.
“Why does Maud bleach her hair?
Bhe deceives nobody.”
“She Isn't trying to. S8he's merely
giving every one an Indication of her
real character” New York Life.
THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. JULY 30, 1908,
| AN ERRATIC PHILOSOPHER.
ical Remarks.
George Bernard Shaw gave an exam-
ple of his satire at the time of the re
cent
| Hyde park, London, A photographer
with hands In
at the parade as it
and a friend who chanced
that his
The acquaint
brilliant but erratic
{i eritie and phllosopher if he, too, had
caught him standing
looking
pockets
passed along,
to see him ascertained wife
was In the procession
| ance asked the
{ been parading, and Mr, Shaw promptly
replied;
“No.
cause
I was not in the procession be
It of
and, thank God, I'm not a woman. |
{ offered to ir wife
| drive me in a wheelbarrow; but, like a
wns a procession womer.,
parade my would
sensible woman, she refused
a
saw
was really a
But,
fine procession. |!
it. while the women had an
unusual average of good |
ooks, the po
licemen's horses were much better
looking. 1 suppose that was because
ORORGE DERSAKD SHAW
i the horses were better cared for. That's
| right, for horses are really
| creatures.”
It was in Hyde park that Mr
| first became
soc
groups
and express |
prow 4
A
of
join the
noted asx an advocate
vlistie Ideas r he used to
of
had usua
fur ed
self for at
ago and
ster on the
fay
CHAIRMAN J. T. LLOYD.
Who
Congressional
Congressman Heads Democratic
Committee
LL
in Cant
was graduated
Lewis co
fro
1857
}
:
|
REPREAENTATIVE JAMES T. LLOYD
university at the same place In 1878
| taught ‘school a few years, then stud
| fod law and was admitted to the bar
| From 1870 to 1883 he was deputy
| elreuft clerk and deputy sheriff of
TLewis county, and In 1888 he re
moved to Shelbyville, which has
since been his home, From 1880 to
1808 he was prosecuting attorney of
Bhelby county He married Miss
Molly Graves In 1581 and has several
children. Chairman Lloyd is prom!
nent In the Odd Fellows and Knights
of Pythian and Is a Methodist, having
served an delegate to the general con.
ference of that denomination, He was
for several years Democratic “whip”
in the house of representatives.
“.
valuable |
|
{
|
|
big procession of suffragettes in |
| whose
i
|
| JULIA DITTO YOUNG AND THE HO
| search
| stone
| Frances
| stances
| giving the
| was duly
“Barham Beach”
The Story of a Poem Written
Thirteen Years Ago and
Suggested by the Character
of the Man Now President.
N days of old it was not uncommon
for those who aspired to shine as
literary stars of their time to
write poems celebrating the deeds
of kings, princes and nobles Not I
frequently the lords who were glorified
In verse bestowed substantial
upon the bards, It
patronizing literature
Young, author of
and other novelettes
shed
The
marked
it
wrote
Few
was
As Julia
D
“Glad
their w of
to
nne's Wife"
Worse Has
n poetical
1
i0re ira:
in re
publi work
hero, not
given—bears a
Theodore Roosevelt,
that she
of
reseml
Prosi
of
view
rtant
the
LR. FN
"BAKNAM BEACH ' WAS LOST
falled to reves
effects
the poet chance
among her
and one day i
in the vault of the town bank In (
donia a pi
ns
situated
house
and E
of her mother
in turesqoe
used
TE]
in
"
aAra« r
ndeed
hetic Ih
its
just
stinct which
production, and the
it suital that
work to the genera
np
made le
she present the original manuascr
the distinguished personage wl
Inspired It. Acting on this suggest
she had It handsomely
presented to Mr elit
who has privately expressed his keen
appreciation of the literars of
bound, an
Hoosen
merits
the work, though modesty forbids that |
he should show any recognition of the |
resemblance of the hero to himself
Mm. Young, who is an exponent of
the Meredith school of verse, enjoys a
high rank among present day Amer!
ean writers by reason of the beauty of
her style, her romantic Imagery and |
high ideals, She has a charming home |
in Buffalo, where her husband, Robert
D. Young, is an officer in a bank
“Barham Beach” Is a poem of about
2.000 lines,
| varying meter save it from danger of
| dent Roosevelt,
monotony, The Incidents do not corre
spond to anything in the life of Presi
The hero
the woman be loves and who returns
Eis affection because in the
soem to eall upon him to make the sac
rifice. It Ix In the
president Is traced
Of the Theodore of “Haram Beach
the author writes
And ever he stirred] with eternal protest
wita Indigoation divine
With the old crusading fury and seal
frenzy hetole and fine
For the people! He gave to the peopl
his fe and his thought and his goid
Longing to see In the service of man the
whole wide earth enrolled,
Longing to hasten the haleyon time when
God shall esteem It good
To melt and fuse all hatred and greed In
a golden brotherhood
but Its divisions and the |
renounces |
circum |
stances duty and a high sense of honor |
Meals of the hem |
and his battles for his fellow man that |
the resemblance between him and the |
Lightning Killed 4 Horses,
The four horses of Loven
Can't Buy This Golden Farm,
After keeping his
Wright, a
of Dau David Henry, of Alt
of ist
secret for 20 yesrs,
As
that
on
{ farmer living in the upper end oona, informed
county, were killed
hin i i
I
lig
near his farm We
The bolt wrecked the
dered Wricht
by ant City Treasurer Bancroft
hint aa } .® Sedaris . : : ; 14 : ‘
ining as he was driving along a road | there was gold on the latter's farm
Henry fo
when he was
nesday atfernoon Brush Mountain, ind the gold
wagon and ren-
He was
ve hic le } Yy 1
Ty J uy 1%; at he
The man ”
most of
a quarter of a cent
ITY ago,
Pa
unconscious, |
of the
home,
but has
hair, which was sit
: - 1 ’ a x and deter 5 i
putting down a we and determined to
{ found in th
neighbors a;
will recover,
debris .
2 Ye sity has been unable to raise
1 Laken
" : 2ancraft will bheoir TIT 8
lost 11% Bancrof Ww Degin pros,
i
oer Hv t) 11 3
ged by the lightning,
Pennsylvania Railtoa
Bulletin,
TOUR TO YELLOWSTONE PARK and
THE CANADIAN ROCKIES.
$1.19
Special Sale
ON
Men's
GOOD HEAVY
Working Shoes
DON'T MISS IT, AT
YEAGER'S SHOE STORE,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
sss EsEREEnEEEENEEEES EEEEEEEEEREEEES
STORE NEWS.
Prunes
The prune crop is abundant this season and the quality is
fine; we have them at 5. 8, 10, 12, 15 and 20 cents per pound,
Mackerel
We have a fine late caught Mackerel that will weigh about
one pound, at 15 cents a piece. Our trimmed and boned
mackerel are strictly fancy fish—medium size at 25c per
pound, and extra large size at joc per pound. These are the
clean meat with practically no bone.
Teas
Fine blended goods of our own combination. We use only
clean sound stock of fine cup qualities. These goods are
giving splendid satisfaction and are good steady winners
Sugar Syrup
We have made quite a find in a genuine old fashioned Pure
Sugar Uraining Syrup of fair color and a fine, smooth flavor
not sharp, hese goods cannot be had in a regular way
and can be found only occasionally
60 cents per gallon,
cents per galion
Maraschino Cherries
These goods how come within the Jojpal requirements of the
pure food laws, We have them in all the sizes.
Sechler & Company's
BELLEFONTE
ddd ddd dd dtd bbb ert rts ert iE ITT TITY YY YO
It is a good value at
Other good grades at so cents and go
i iets died det ted ede et tt RE a IIa