Republican news item. (Laport, Pa.) 1896-19??, September 06, 1912, Image 5
Hinkle Jailed; His Lady Friend in Serious Trouble I. J. Kiukle, of 44. r >."> North Set! find street, Sunlmry, who deserted his wife ami family several weeks ago and left for the. West in com pany with Florence 1 'falT. a. Milton woman, was arrested at Klkhart. Indiana, Tuesday morning of last week. Tie waived his right of ex tradition and accompanied Ih«> ol fiecrs t<> this State, arriving in Snn hury Thursday evening of la.st week. Last Friday morning he was arrainged before Justice 1. A. I'e- Witt and committed to jail in <!<■- fan It of hail on a charge of desert ion and non-support, the hearing to he held when his wife is ahle to appear against him. Miss I'fall'is held at Williams port, charged hy the Interstate Com met ce Commission with riding on a pass made out in the name of another. It appears that Hinkle got a pass for himself and wife, and the other woman rode on it. Baggage Master Penned in Car With Dog that Had Rabies Kdwtn S. Kurd, of Renovo, had charge of a baggage end of a com bination smoking car on his down trip last Friday, a rim from Uenovo to Sunbury. when a passenger got aboard at Williamspoit with a blooded bulldog. The do<; was chained In the one end of the bag gage comparl ineiit, the only exit from the «ir except the side doors, l»arel\ had the train got well under wa\ when the dog. which had been perfectly quiet up to that time, developed rabies. lie made stenuous efforts to reach Burd.who was without any weapon. The dog's chain was sutlicient ly ioi.g to give him plenty of room In run and jump in his frenzy, and Kurd was in constant fear of the collar and chain breaking. When the train stopped at Nor thumberland lie got (|iiicklv out of a side door, obtained help and the maddened brute was subdued. ]»urd, while somewhat excited, con tinued his run. The dog was killed, V ' io VEARS' H ■ fUES -qW-klv.~ l VSADE WiAR«S DE3IGNS COPYRIGHTS AC. Anyone aenriing ft nketrh nnd description me qtllrkiv ;iS' ■i , rt :t i n 112 .SIT ' *lr:i •. 112 free wlie.lln-r in invention if pi'ohabiy palrntanle. C'oniimi?i:ra ti«>nhMt:i<Ml?n »niilo!i»i.ii. HANDBOOX on I'atcntb sent fi ' .. n|,i«»Ht iiKt'iicy for p.H-iirniif jintoiilH. Patents taken throuuh MIIIIM & To. recrlvc wial notice, without la the Sciesiiific Hmerkan. A handsomely Dlustratod weekly. Largest eir filiation of any ncientltte Journal. Terms, n year, four months, fi. Hold by all newsdealers. M&Co, 361 Broadway, New York Branch Offlco. 026 K Washington. M. BRINK'S PRICES For This Week ton 100 Hi Corn Meal 35.00 1.75 Cracked Corn 25.00 1.75 Corn :»5 00 1.75 Pure( /orn&( >atsChop 30.00 1 ,S5 each fie with privilege of returning without expense to inc. Schumacher Chop 'l2 oo 1.(i5 Wheat Bran 120.00 135 Oil Meal 39.00 2.00 Gluten 32.0') 1.05 Brewers Grain 28.00 1.50 Choiee Cottonseed Meal 34 00 1.75 Oyster Shells 10.00 00 Portland Ceinen per tout S.OO lo ( rebate 1« c each for sacks re nrne 1) Beef Scrap 3.00 Old Oats per Ihi. .70 New Oats arrive in Sept. or Oct. .42 140 lit bag Salt coarse or line .00 100 lh bag Rait .45 I 4 lour per l)hl. sack Shnniacher Patent 0 00 1.70 Marvel rj (>0 1.70 Luxury 5. so 1.50 Veal Calves wanted on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday Live fowls and < hid ens on Wcd'ncs lay. M. BRINK New Albany IV SUBSCRIBE NOW. ——n——imn~ir mini iniiiiinniiHiuiniii NO TRESPASS BE SURE TO GET THE RIGHT KIND. WE HAVE THEM AT 50c PER DOZEN. THE NEWS ITEM FLOATED TO THE NEW SITE Village of Provlncetown Was Put on Rafts and Moved Across . the Bay. Commercial street in Provlncetown had an .irigin in keeping with Its pres ent nautical air and appeal to the imagination. The town originally stood on the spit of sand far oat across the harbor, where tho light house now is. Many years ago tho government bought Provlncetown, houses and all, in order to protect tho harbor from the threatening sea. The Provincetonians went to the govern ment and asked what they were go ing to do with tho houses. "Pull 'em down, of course," said the government. "Can't we have "em?" inquired tho late owners. "Sure," replied the government, "If you'll take 'oiu away." "Sure!" echoed the Provincetoni ans. Old wreckers that they were, they applied their technic to the problems of houseniovlng. They bulkheaded their dwellings up, necklaced empty casks about them in the way of life preservers, and one sunny morning the village of Provlncetown, true to its maritime traditions, set sail, schoolhouse and all, and came float ing gnyly across the harbor to whore it now stands. Near the railway track today they point out a certain store as the original seafaring school house. —Robert Haven Schauffler in the Metropolitan Magazine. HOW NATURE LEADS US ON After the Courtship Dreams With Their Bright Hues Come the Babies' Future Dreams. Love is an illusion. Some seem to take It as a bitter thing that after tho honeymoon the married pair settle down to the humdrum of everyday nosß. Hut, in the first place, they never quite become entirely disillu sioned. The stain of the rainbow lin gers in the average marriage, and in tho second place, oven if this illusion passes, another comes, for there are tho children, and lover and lass who once dreamed of each other now are father and mother and must dream of the babies' future. Illusions are Nature's device for get ting things done. That is why tills young men so full of illusions as to their own power. Heaven help us if young people knew precisely what they could dot They would do noth ing at all. And if girls knew Just what mar riage was going to be, and all their future down to the grave, they would never marry. Illusions are Nature's bait. Life itself is progressive illusion: "Mala" the Hindus call It. And we are not poor dupes. Nature is riot cheating us, and sneering at us tho while. She is leading us on in love, as -wo lead our littlo children. — Dr. Prank Crane in Woman's World. The Smoking Mountain. In 1897 I climbed two volcanoes in Mexico—Popocatepetl or "the Smoking Mountain," about 17,800 feet, and Oriz aba, the former the most famous be cause within view from Mexico City and thus a source of especial pride and admiration to the inhabitants, who have been loath to believe that any other of their mountains could be high er. Popo has a really splendid crater, about half a mile across and one thou sand feet deep. The walls are gen erally vertical, but in one or two places It is possible to descend. When workers nre engaged in collecting sul phur, machinery is used to hoist them up and down. From Popo's summit there is a glorious prospect, not alone of the Immense crater, but of the beau tiful "White Lady," Ixtacclhuatl, re clining a thousand feet below; of Oriz aba on the far horizon, and of the charming valley of Mexico. —Annie S. Peck in"The Christian Herald." Opaque Windows. «* The building contractor let loose some of his most emphatic phrases when he found that the man who had been hired to daub whiting all over the windows had not half done thu job. "That man doesn't seem to under stand what the windows in a half-fin ished building are whitened for,"he said. "We don't plaster them over with chalk to prevent the public from seeing the unfinished condition of the interior, but to keep the workmen from battering out the glaßs. Trans parent glass looks Just about as trans parent as air to the man who is mov ing a wooden or Iron beam, In a hur ry, and he Is likely to ram the end of It through an expensive window, but when the glass Is coated with white It becomes visible, and the workmen hand their material In through the door." • One Benefit. To top off an expensive education a young married woman of no particular ability in any one line took a course at a dramatic school. She never attempt ed to secure an engagement, BO one day a close and oandld friend of her husband asked what good all that training had done, anyhow. "So far as I can Bee," he said, "that S3OO you spent on Ethel's dramatic education has been practically thrown away." "Oh, no, It hasn't," returned the hus band mildly. "Her stage experience has taught her to dress In a hurry. Nowadays when I ask her togo any place with me she can change her clothes In ten minutes, it used to take over aa hour." Jack Johnson's casual remarks about limling training more difficult than it nseil to he sounds a little like an effort to tempt some am bitious lighter to dare Jack to knock a good-sized purse off his. (/WW ANTED-A RIDER AGENT (112 yj J&w IJJ EACH TOWN and district to rifle and exhibit a samplo Latest Model ft "®ngor bicycle furnished by ns. Our agents every wliere are making ni'HH'.V fast.. 14' rite for fullparticulars and special vffer at once. #VbK|\ /frm REQUIRED until you receive and approve of your H v lvlk\ *f\M J ,lc -vcle. We ship to anyone anywhere in the TT. S. without a cent deficit /// II TMi\ VrXM advance, prepay freight, ami allow TEN DAYS* FREE TRIAL during 1/ 1 , llfi\ fwlA J v ' hich time ride the bicycle and put it to any test you wish. 3 I IS\ A \'\« J? yo P a . r ? then not perfectly satisfied or do not wish to keep the 112« i 1 iIW II''VI Mcycloshiip it back toils at our expense and >om will not beoutone cent. I' j« ill FACTORY PRICES furnish the highest fjrailo bicycles it. is I 7 \ 7I1)% i rrJ3 ~, 1 „ possible to make at one small iirolit abovo I ic-ald IliA WrP m " c,ll !V factory cost You save ?t0 to (25 middlemen's profits by buy ■ IP/V'W/v ■'.'iff direct <>f usland linvo the manufacturer's guarantee behind your ■ , MulllJma r ■'•'cycle. DO NOT BUY a bicyclo or a pair of tires from n,, y n,r at an, ■/' if \Vf ' E frt " unt 'l you receive our catalogues and Irani our unheard of factor, ■ 't i lfWi lfWi i nr r,e " and remarkable special offers to rider agents. |\' jli I\B YOU WILL BE ASTONISHED m\ r is /"lilt low prices wo enn niuko you this year. Wo wll tho highest srado bicycles ?.»r Wi 1 I## other factory. Woftr.-KatlHlled with 91.00 profit atiovefuetorv cost. r> r<lersliliivl ili' l " Bell OUP blcycles untlur your own uumu plate at double oar prlcus. yßj&y SECOND HAND DiCYCLES. Wo do not regularly handlepccond hand bicycles, but usually have frn»T» iff I's'in lu HV n ,n . trrt do by our Chicago retail stores. These wo clear out promptly at prices hi 98orK1O.l»e0crlptlvn bargain lists tnaitodrrvo. COASTER-BRAKES. Bing,c shoe's imported roller chains and pedals, parts, ropalrsand ** v ** ** BB M iiHR It w | equipment oi uil kinds at half the regular retail i>rtccs. I A— Hedgethorn Puncture-Proof 5/15® HI Self-healing Tires £§T Hj The priceofthese tire.i t rWrf SIO.OO per pair, but to introduce vte&SE* " 1 " ■' m will sell you a sample pairfors4.Ho(cash ">nl> nrJ,r iJ t V/ 112 112 WAILS, Tacfc.,orcla»s will not lot thoairout.l [-■. MMS* I / / / /■] A hundred thousand pairssold last. venr. IV» ijl I t I / * .<■" DESCRIPTION: ' ridlnp, very durable nnd lined Inside with I, . / asiM i-ial diinlity of rubl«>r, which never t -J -j r^_- - . , / comes porous and which closes up Mnrill punctures without a llowini? the air to escape. IJR .. wo have hundreds of letters from sat isfied customers u II Jfolice tho thick rubbcrtrcad st atinsr that tiieir t ires have only been ixunix <1 lip once Q_jV A* ," nt ' puncture st rips *'B" or twice in a whole season. They weitrh no more than IT®" and D" also rim strip "K" an ordinary tire, theimnctureresistintriiualities beinir X !fL to prevent rim cutting. This Kiven l>y several layers of thin, specially prepared V * lro wi " outlast any other fabric on tho tread. Tho regular price of these tires \f maho—SOFT, ELASTIC and • is ?KMK> IH-r pair, but for ad vert isintf purposes we are u EASY RIDING, makl uir a special factory price to tho rider of only 84.80 per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received. We ship C O i>. on approval. You do not pay a cent untii \uu have examined and found them strictly as represented. u,V^H'oni l !. ncß ? h <, ' ,cou " , an. I monoy Hon tto us Ibii« KnfoMH 111 n tiunk. ir yon nnlorn pair of ttioso tins. %,..i wilt Unit t l.nt th.v will ri.lo oiislor. run fanlor. wonr Potior, lust toneoronil h.,,k llnor tlinn anv tiro you hiivo pvor us Yt or soon atLTJ ! yon JOU wl " elvo ua >"" r IF YOU NEED TIRES prlooqnoUst altovo: or wrltoforour McTlro ami Sundry CaUHocuowuioli Uoncrlbosami u'uifes „n „ lu k, sand hlnds i»f tln-snt alout liulf the usual prices. J.L.MEADCYCLE COMPANY, CHICAGO,ILL. 76° Special Motor antaneous, ptiwerful, clean explosion—quick iprnition— B Power Withnik r Ar linn no f ar A lx,n di'POHits ih.so are guaranteed. All rofined maroon products. No natural" gasolines uaed. WAVERLY OIL WORKS COMPANY, independent Refiner* , PITTSBURG. PA. ■ |p A Distinction With a Difference YOU may not always get what you pay for. It takes a good judge of values to do that, but if there is one sure rule in business it is—you pay for all you get. You may not be able to see the difference between engines of similar appearance at different prices, but if you buy from a reputable firm you may be sure the difference in quality is there. IH C Oil and Gasoline Engines ffl cost more than some others because they are more carefully made, and more thoroughly tested. Skillful designing, better material, better workmanship, more careful assembling, I and more thorough testing, tell in the long run. Given equal care an IH C engine costs less per year of service than any other engine you can buy. If an IH C engine is given all the work it will do, pumping, sawing wood, running the grindstone, feed grinder, hay press, silage cutter, repair shop machines, cream separator, churn, washing machine, etc., etc., it will pay for itself in a very short time in money and labor saved. I HC engines are made in every style— horizontal, vertical, air and water-cooled, || stationary, portable and mounted on skids, to I operate on gas, gasoline, kerosene, naphtha, dis | filiate or alcohol, in sizes from 1 to 50 H. P. w Kerosene-gasoline tractors, 12, IS, 20, 25 and H The IHC local dealer will give you cata- H logues and full information, or write I Internai : "n?.l Harvester Company of America II (lncoriioratod) # | Elmira N. Y. H I UC Service Bur.iq (J] The p-jrrvi-f nf tins Bureau la to furnish, free H| ir ■ ii.ill th" li.'st information obtainable U| <iii ' tt'i I .ll nii.. if vim 1 1 ave any worthy aues- *•" lCmfyVfff ■ l' r '"ti.. Mii.s. crripß. land drainage, irrl- Ai'imff QB t'M'ui I.till . make your Inquiries specific BWRMff/ Ml y -I •■ml til. ii:11 C Survlca Bureau, Harvester 3H$N^ The half-baked philosophers who are calling liaby Astor's £.'5,000,- j 000 a handicap would have to be* putin straight jackets for a couple of week if somebody should die anil | leave 'em #450. (■■BMflMMHMn** r*n~.* ' 'TIIKBmmBBF* Bill of Fare "Yi's, we'vo just had to chloroform our last, dog," sighed Mrs. Mack re signedly. "He had such a bad tem per. No, we didn't bury him —we couldn't unless we dug up the alley, and we might have been arrested for that. And it's so disagreeable to keep a dog around waiting for (he authori ties to take him away that the boys just took him down the street a few blocks late at nifiht. and put him in one of the vestibules. "No, of course, I didn't inquire. So I don't know what they did with him. Now we're looking around for another dog." Mrs. Mack brightened perceptibly as she viewed the prospect of having a new pet. "You know, it's awfully lone- Home without a dog," she said. "But k-'t tilc tell you one tiling—the next dog is going to have, a very different bring ing up. "Our first, dog was a, tiny black and tan, and he was such a baby that we fed him with cream through a piece of cotton. It.was all very well for a few 'Viys while the feeding was a novelty, but after that no one wanted to feed hifn —and I simply had to! And when he got big enough to eat common fare he simply refused to touch it. So there I had to pay for an extra bottle of cream every blessed day for that dog! "It was months before he'd think of taking a drop of the cream without the cotton too! Well, the dog catch ers i.'"t him at last, and 1 was so tired of feeding him that I didn't, try to bail him out. "Then we had Fanny. Fanny was a tiny fuzzy puppy, and we simply adored her Hut T thought I was wise after my experience with the black and tan, and I wouldn't feed her a par ticle of cream. I made up my mind that everything she ate and got used to while she was young should be just the common fare from the table. And I insisted that she should get to lik ing vegetables while she was too young to know any better. "We got Fanny in the spring, when we had fresh vegetables. Later on I used to save skins and ends of the to matoes and cook them up with other things as I had to feed Fanny. "That dog was splendid about it, too; ate every scrap I gave her, and I was delighted. That is, until tho fall came and tomatoes were too high to buy every day. "I cooked up Fanny's dinner as usu al—and the little scamp refused to eat! After a day or two I got scared. I thought sho was going to bo ill, so I tried all sorts of delicacies to tempt her appetite, but it was of no use. Sho simply wouldn't eat and she grew thin as a lath! "Finally one day we had guests, and I had salad again—and unthinkingly I fixed up Fanny's food as usual. And you should have seen that dog eat! She ate and ate and ate —and when she had finished all I had to give her she lay by her plate and kept her nose over it, just daring any one to take it away! It was the tomatoes! She had had them every day since she was a puppy, and she couldn't eat without them! "After Fanny died —we used to buy canned tomatoes after that and it real ly wasn't very expensive, though it was a nuisance—we got a collie. "Colli© was a fine blue ribbon dog, and my husband was a lot prouder of him than he was of his whole family combined. He'd strut up and down in front of the house by tho hour airing the dog, just as of the dog hadn't been out the whole blessed day airing him self! Collie used to get the best of dog biscuit and choice cooked bits of meat. He wouldn't even look at the things that ordinary dogs eat, and we didn't expect him to. His beauty and lineage entitled him to tho best and we gave it to him willingly. "However, when summer came we planned togo away as usual. Wo thought we'd go west, and the first thing was to plan for was that Collie should be well taken care of. We asked all our friends who knew Collie well to take care of him in our ab sence, but they all refused, gently but firmly—l couldn't, think why. Finally my husband asked a friend of ours out in the country to tnke Collie, and he consented. We sent Collie out there the day we left on our little trip. "At our first stopping place we found a telegram saying that Collie refused to eat, being evidently lonesome with out us. We laughed and said he'd get over it. So we went on. At the sec ond city there was another telegram saying that Collie hadn't eaten for days and that we'd better return. We did. "We found that Collie just wanted dog biscuit and tenderloin! He wasn't at all particular about our presence, provided he got the kind of fare he demanded. "Tho dog wo have next time is going to begin his meals with soup and he's going to have every course until tho 'CofTee —I'm hoping that'll be a final solution of our troubles. Still, it's so hard to know just what to do about a dog!"— Chicago Dally News. As It Is Told in Houston. A fool in Brooklyn gave a jackass three teaspoonsful of Tabasco sauca to see what he would do. The by standers fled in time to save their lives, but the property loss was con siderable. When a fool and a jackass get together things are bound to hap pen.—Houston Post. c* .iisnfc Game Season Opened Sept. 1 This week opened the game sea son for 1913 in Pennsylvania, Sep tember 1 being the first day for shooting water fowl, shore birds and snipe along the rivers and for blackbirds of all kinds and doves. Reports received from the state game commission indicate the game of every kind will be abundant this year, the season having been favor able for propagation of feathered game in all parts of the State. This season for blackbirds and for shore birds will run to January 1, and on web footed water fowl until April 10. The shooting of birds before sunrise is prohibited. The snipe season runs until May 1. There is no limit on the number of birds that may be shot. Raccoons are legal game since September 1, and may be taken in unlimited numbers until January 1. The plover season is now on, and good kills are reported from many counties. Quarantining Against the Hookworm. A new ami rather interesting phase of the hookworm problem has come to the front in San Francisco. After the South, Cali- I'crnia, too,was found badly afflicted with I lie pernicious parasite. It was known to exist in the mines of that state, I>ill recently has been found prevalent among Porto Rican and oriental labors who are mostly engaged in agricntural pursuit. Probably one-third to, perhaps, one-half of the immigrants coming from the Orient are infected with hookworm: an investigation during which '£') were examined reveal ed that 1.077 harbored the intest inal parasite. In San Francisco it has recently been discovered that a number of laborers, chiefly from the West Indies, engaged in mar ket-gardening on a tract of land within the city limits, are afflicted with hookworm and, on account of the danger of transmitting the parasite by unhooked vegetables, the laborers have been quarantined and placed under treatment, and the vegetables from these gardens will not be allowed to be sold in the market until all evidence and danger of hookworm infection are eliminated. The usual rout of the in fection is through the skin of the feet,but it is believed that uncooked vegetables carrying the hookworm eggs or larvje might also be a source of infection. This phase of the question and the method of solving it are rather novel, says The Journal of the American Medi cal Association. Doubtless similar conditions obtain elsewhere, and the San Francisco plan will afford a precedent in meeting them. The Best place to buy goods Is otten asked by the pru dent housewife. Money saving advantages arealways being searched for Lose no time in making thorough examination of the New Line of Merchandise Now on ?????? ? ? ? STEP IN AND ASK ABOUT THEM. AM answered a* Vernon Hull's Large Store. HILLSGRQVE, PA. - ■ POUT on patentability. Patent practice ex- ■ eluMively. BANK REFERENCES. ■ Send 2 cents in stamps tor Invaluable book H on HOW TO OBTAIN And BELL PATENTS, ■ Which ones will pay. How to tret n partner, ■ patent law and other valuable Information. ■ D. SWIFT & CO. I PATENT LAWYIRI, fl 303 Seventh St., Washington, D. C.J