Page 4 THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. Thursday, November 4th, 1909, A Whe Centre Democrat, FRED KURTZ, SR., Editor. CHAS. R. KURTZ. Editor and Proprietor, W. FRANCIS SPEER, Associate Editor, ———— SWO TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION : SUBSCRIPTION, Persons who send or bring the money to the ofMoe and pay in advance, $1 per year CENTRE DEMOCRAT clubs with N. Y. thrice-a-week World for Pistsburg Stockman for...... . $1.88 The date your subscription expires is plainly printed on the label bearing your name. All gredits are given by a change of label the first | {ssue of each month. Watch that, after you remit. We send no receipts unless by special request. Watch date on your abel Subscribers changing postoflice address, pot notifying us, are liable for same Subscriptions will be continued, unless other wise directed. cya no collector. You are expected to send or bring the money to this office EDITORIAL. Taft, the President, with part of his cabinet, has about ended his 13,000 mile trip to the Pacific country. bill is charged up to Uncle Sam-— whose treasury has a deflelt. Peary proved that he reached the Pole, by an investigating report. Well, who says he Peary is the who says Dr. didn't reach the Pole and calls him a faker. one More trouble for the Quay monument It is planted in a niche of the capitol, done so at night without a spectator. Now it has been discovered that the niches in the rotunda of the capitol committee's | didn't? | Cook | RN CIRCULATION OVER ss00 | $1.50 Per YEAR | that you owe it and | i | { help to build up his home community | | i for The | | | | munion have been put there as receptacles for | flags and that the Quay statue must | hou vamoose the ranch From gangster circles itis proposed THE LOCAL MERCHANT. A merchant in Willlamsport preach- es the doctrine that a dollar kept at home and spent for goods Is # great many times as much dollar sent broadcast to distant order houses, whence it may be {in returning to the home community | through channels of In | his newspaper advertisement the mer presents the matter in these as the mall years commerce, [ chant | words: | “Catalogue houses who furnish { market for the farmers’ products taxes, support schools | churches, and nothing for your home enterprises, your puccesses | your fallures, or even your | needy and unfortunate, It is to the best of the community In which you land you it to the best Interests of yourself, to at least give local mer- chants a trial and chance to compare goods and And that's who has no pay | nO no care a fact, owe prices.” the truth local The patriotism any will He will at least give his home mer- chants a chance to compete, and most of them can compete in prices, quality quality, There Aare are Aare are lot of in the argument the city dealers who want your for their goods. The home wants your continual custom and it is an object for him to deal fairly he will every time are are whole Aare are are are bosh of cash and GREENBURR. school In the Reformed church will be at 9 o'clock sharp; com- Saturday sunday La vices on noon ) J Mackey Kahl hq pany of on Prof at the genial lea band, brought Raymond Sunday, and In com- iHlam and Ad. Kahl, called M. Kahl in the afternoon moved Into Clair Douty's 26th of October Brungard died was buried or der of the aged to pass a law making every hunter pay | he a license of $1 a year, There being 150,000 hunters in the state—including is claimed n revenue suffic 1 oth be unnaturalized foreiguners—it this would bring i pay for scalps ard unties, which the state There would be funds enough, tl were hieves made This spare, if the capitol to disgorge the six mi hunting lic and will meet w except that much more payers and fo len, unt nse wouia ith with gangsters—we wo r th HARMON FOR PRESIDENT W. J. Bryar be the Presidentia andida Democratic party is the « Norman E. Mack, ) Democratic National Committee, who was in Washington on Friday. Mr. Mack sald it was quite possible Mr. Bryan might seek the nomination again; he was not In a state what the Nebraska tentions might be. But he dent, from his knowledge sentiment, that Mr. Bryan ire another That pinion I i of ti irma leader's felt confi of § 11d wou arty ! not dent Presi a ind RK Ind increasir Republi affairs In ications find their the that the would party time opened party Ans very bad shape by the next Presidential The were campaign of intelligent and more internal dissensions growing and voters were hecoming more dissatisfied The Congressional lead- ers had balked the President in the de sire for real tariff reform. and this made it certain that the tariff wld again be a leading issue In the cam paign of 1512 EMIGRATION TO CANADA, During the last fiscal gration from the United States to Can ada was the record even exceeded the number of arrivals from Britain. They are chiefly experienced agriculturists with capital Practically 60.000 Canada, mar child was possessed on $1.000 In stoc k. cash ing they brought nearly 360.000 000 Why do hardy farmers left Pennsylvania and other middle states to seek their fortunes in the far west, now leave their native land and settle In ne ining foreign to better their condition? Among these are many who are natives of our own county of Centre. The Is, the high tariff has to a large extent, unprofitable In the United States, and hey find in Cun ada no excessive tariff burdens to In crease the cost of living that welgh #0 heavily upon the farmer, as does the tariff in our own country, largest on and Great Americ entered woman and AR average of ind effects, mean- into Canada very and every these an Je land main reason made farming trusts and monopolies sole reason—afid thereby looses Its sor thelr wealth line Into Canada, by millions That's the this country Lived to 97 on Pie. In Bellville, Mo. there lives fn most remarkable near centenarian named Benjamin West. Despite the fact that ple, In a literal sense, Is about the shortest thing there is, It will make a man live far beyond the average al. lotted time If he only sticks to it, Mr Went claims. When he was 20, he was given up for dead several times by the doctors, who sald he was not long for this world at the best, but he took to a ple diet and began to Improve. Now at 97 he Is one of the spryest men In Missouri. Any ple will do, so long as it Is ple, he pays. that | position to | in- | which | skins the agriculturist and fattens the | 1} two Salvation Army News. ore ’ Ls Alutant } nt t he Arms hall for | quite a success lof the Army wre, for which thankful From BIEN erest f The ngs vation | their musical held Ir were the royally MANAgers are until! Wed: And Harvey, Ir ive Arn n Be waday En charge Hefonte tt = Had The Ne Monday « rve. POArAance the “Bellef ch Is Fre After » wh Hustler the Dally matter ir labors daily paper in Tle | prope rt | redit and resurre the his han was the lefonte no it = er neat the 3 on projector « How long edith at Howard be seen. but prise dally wil we hope the ope n | heartily end Dunham and « making the effort ree action with 100088 rate year the emi. Roosevelt This week publication of Hunting Stories. have resumed the Roosevelt hunting six you will find we the and page an interesting Elk.’ At this of on readers ing and than what Teddy quite a bunch of him which will time to time stories on of the are interested there are in writing other be time most hunt none better We have articles from published from Year ir events in who | Aid Society Sale. The Ladies’ Ald Boclety of the Lu. theran church, of Bellefonte a salesroom on Saturday next, 6th, in the room lately occupied by Roan's grocery, on Rishop street, at which will be kept on rolls, ples, cakes, aprons, ote. The pa- tronage of the public is respectfully so Helted during the afternoon and even. ing Al. Garman's Vote. In Blair county AlL 8. Garman was we democratic nominee for sheriff While he made great mains in and about Tyrone, the republican majority by the thousands and | of 3,000 In Blalr county was tos much oes with them across the | for him to overcome. Tyrone tainly gave him a fine vote cer. A Farmer's Horrible Death. Newton McMillen, a farmer of New Bloomfield, was operating a corn shredder when his hand caught in the machinery In an instant his head was drawn Into the shredder and crushed, He was dead before help arrived Real Estate, The Henney real estate, advertised in another part of the paper, will be sold this Thursday and Friday. This will be a good opportunity for an in- vestment as some choloe properties are listed, worth | nor | poor, | interests | Hy e, | person | is al dealer | { dectomy, REMOVAL OF APPENDIX Prohibited By Law. { { { Declaring that the medical world has | | grievously blundered In advocating surgical treatment for appendicitis and | calling upon the law to put to what he are “criminal opera- | tions,” of Boston's well-known | physicians has startled the scientific {eircles by his unqualified denunciation of the modern doctors’ methods, | He also declares that the germ the- | OFN a stop ‘ terms one | today Is based is “a stupid fallacy he asserts that vaccination or the injection of serum obtained from hors- into the human tem than blood polsoning, Pasteur treatment for means subjecting to “two Instead of one.” The proved a {and “8 sy is nothing while the rables, in his the patient | Ie NH opinion, physician whose utterances have veritable bomb in the medi- Dr. Charles BE. Page many in of in | eal-camp mn YOnrs graduate of College of that been unlearning much him, and to this fact rugged health experiencs the Electie 1881, but he leaving | Bostonian | 20 in Medical fully explains class | care since college he has | that he ascribes ge of “I have appendi was taught his at the 70 following been itis for appendectomy Dr. Page, “and 1 that the day people will finally the the records of ever the | says operations since craze started” confidently be. is coming when the realize that apper the appendix lleve cutting of | is a criminal operation | ort report | association after- | local expenses proved | cut article on "Hunting the! will open | afternoon, | sale bread, | 96 “I remember ab having ut me years ¥ of journal a a read of the in of dical meeting of Philadelphia opinion of the be that the append organ and that it it off than not There ber, he ini together different, and I remer } tn. 2 an i medical the members n where concensus seemed to ix was a useless better Was Was one mem wever, whose opinion as w fits ing life by it and the Bay operati neems ne t Bp ndix, hardls Only recently es of Clyde nt | we have | Fitch, the striking Instanc the play or Jol Mir Kreat wright ™ Gove f nesota The EAT PIE AND LIVE LONG The Good Old Penna Mealthful Dutch Kind is Years when his down and the up.” He ok Ean to to improv K 1 healt} enth age was nigh broken re had given him a liking to _ pie We don't rtened his life We do kn« Pennsylvania As A ru and are home-made ple, for that Year know whe fr how mh 3 Germans are i neEumers any other the women Pennsylvar to bake variety are other le great o« ahead of ple And Class of know, too. ho in all the ph the yank dames delcient in Pennsylvania Germans were not given to ple-making In their native land, but in other respects were gquoens at get ting up good substantial, well wked and seasoned-—the best the world. The Pennsylvania German damsels, having every variety of | fruit at command, In abundance, soon {acquired a knowledge as to how It could be utilized Into delicious ple and ple baking became of the fine arta with them, and remained so until this day of poor cooks of other nations, yankees not And | with these model German cooks It Is | ple at breakfast, at dinner, at supper surrounded by dishes of other whole | some, well-cooked food An to the ple | We enumerate some: the apple ple peach, cherry, blackberry, huckleberry { elder, dried apples (snitz) rheubarh mince, crumb, and perhaps a dozen other kinds of ples, flanked by half dozen kinds of tarts. All these are of German invention, and the constant eaters are healthy, strong and long lived | nationality folks of citizenship good ple which are mentably in w n in Ia duties nin an meals coe in ple one han excepted | ple-bakers and ple-eaters descendants In Centre, Union, Lancaster, Dauphin, and fifty counties of the Keystone state damaels, never fall below the their Rerks, other the stan. may wholesome, delicious, 1fe-prolonging ples and tarts, along with the other good cooking for which the Germans are world-renowned, That If a recent report Is true a Bellefonte young man will have to re- duce his bank account to keep down & nasty scandel that has Just leaked out through the bung hole. upon which the medical science of | of | The visiting friends | necessary to che the long list of deaths received | following the operation Hurrah, then, for the Pennsylvania | dard of thelr mamas In baking good, | DIDN'T WORRY HIM. An Emergency Message That Failed of Its Purpose. At the last session of cengress there was a very close division on an im portant measure that was pending. A western member was fighting the bill with all of the vigor at his command, and his success depended absolutely on his presence at nis post. A clever member of the devised a scheme whereby the troublesome man could be Jured away. the morning of the to be taken a telegram was sent to the hotel of the { It read “Come ife | opposition Accordingly on day the vote was ghting member home at « w dangerously il ing to the wl response feel ried wi about the least,” was the reply. asked the other the have no wife.” ' replied Not an Oyster. A party of tired and hungry travel ers in a small European town saw a | house decorated with a peculiar sign | and immediately entered and demand- | ed to be served with oysters, “This 1s not a restaurant,” sald the courteous gentleman who met them. “l am an aurist.” “Isn't that the d or oyster hung outside one an asked gentlemen, It is an ear™ Reassured. man living In an English interest in the give t} cholr a the really prince ng them for a week to Paris This } escorting them while there to all the places of inter uty In that charming city, during the whole of their stay or even on return did one of the men say to him that they had liked the trip or had enjoyed themselves, Naturally anxious to know whether they had so, a few days after their return he asked one of the churchwardens, a farmer In the vik lage, whether he thought the men had enjoyed their time In Paris. The churchwarden cogitated for a moment or two “Well, sir,” be sald at length, ain't heard no complaints.” B&B blankets—comforts Cotton Comforts — so many kinds, grades and patterns—any and every person can make casy and quick selection and get ex- actly the kind preferred Cotton Comforts, silkoline cov: ered, 90c, $1.00, $1.25 to fine Mercerized sateen covered, $3.50. Splendid Cotton Comforts — retty silkoline filled with fine ‘hite carded cotton—$1.25. Down Comforts, mercerized sateen covered, $3.50 to the very choice brocaded silk, £25.00. —$3.00 to $1000 provides amply fine Down Comforts for usual requirements, Wool filled Comforts — silko- line covered, $3.50—silk covered, A wealthy village church treat and d«¢ ily one of who took great Were to 1 ded on ie taki ¢ did. and bw but not d out the done " i $7.50 to fine brocaded silk, £17.00. | Cotton Blankets, so much used to replace sheets in cold weather ~60c to the heavy Cotton so | fine California | closely resembling ON ) Wool Blankets, £2.50 a pair enough ootton added to prevent shrinking—the way many people pre fer thelr Blankets—$300 to $6.50 » r, | PA endta California Wool Blankets | weCream White with Pink or Blue bor | der and wide silk bound edge, $6.50, All wool Blankets, $3.00 to $20.00, Good old fashioned unnapt Country Blankets—all wool-axtra large size «White with colored border—§8.00, BOGGS & BUHL NORTH SIDE, PITTEBURGH, PA. andl | lela Wool Blankets — not pure wool, | healthful properties of Grapes are conveyed tc food by ROYAL BAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure The only Baking Powder Made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartcr Hence Finer, More Wholesome Food Gift of Curtin Heirs, Recently in “ee 5 ad irtin homestead Only Two More Years. require but preparing leave in Bellefonte the heirs found icles, but hey do- Amon mons to th te Governor A, G, Curtin many valuzble and useful not having a place to put nated them to their friends. these ar them ' 0 Was a n Gov, Curtit to the lames "ring : Notified to Boil Water. Mothers! Fathers! To Settle Cook's Claim of five Ala Kar | f at} phed ee YEars. Do It whether | ook reached th ummit, | : iting i off nt The party will start NOW! Many a parent has the keen- | est regrets because they “put off” have The annual teachers’ Institute of | Clearfield county will be held at Clear | during the week beginning Dee. | 13th. A strong lot of attractions and workers booked the turers the ing the children photographed. We will give you a picture that will are make you ing Pickett, whe among lec. prouder still widow of General THE MALLORY STUDIO, Crider’'s Exchange That is one secret of the success of this Typewriter. Necessary devices which, with other typewriters are attached (at an extraprice) or else built as parts of “special” ma- chines with only one use (at a more exorbitant price), are inbuilt in every NEW MODEL L. C. SMITH & BROS. TYPEWRITER All these kinds of work-—and others—done by one simple typewriter, our regular correspond. ence machine, without any extra cost in attachments. BALL BEARINGS — throughout — typebar, carriage, segment — all important frictional points made anti-frictional. Some Inbuilt Features: Card Writing, Decimal Tabulating, Condensed Billing, Color Work and Stenciling. The inbuilt devices save you the price of attachments (costly things, these attachments); the ball bearings save work and wear. And this complete machine costs no more than others which must have expensive attachments to make them complete. To buy a typewriter without investigating the L. C. SMITH & BROS. would be like buying silver without looking for the “ Sterling ” mark. Send for the Free Miustroted Book. L. C SMITH & BROS. TYPEWRITER COMPANY 132) Walowt Street., . Philadelphia, Pa. Williamsport, Pa.,Branch - - 126 West Fourth Street
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers