oR, ITER Edward VII Laid to] Rest. Royalty of All the World In Great Cortege That Marched Through Dense Crowds In London. London, May 20. — The funeral of King Fdward VII. at Windsor was one of the most gorgeous and mourn. ful pageants of recent times, and in many respects surpassed that of Queen Victoria nine years ago. Ed- ward VII. now rests near his mother, Queen Victoria, and his father, who died forty years ago. The funeral was headed by a mul titude of men prominent in the British and foreign military and naval ser vices. Immediately behind the gun berg. King Edward's charger came next, led, and then the royal stand- ard. Behind came a cavalcade of royal personages, King George leading. The kaiser rode on his right and the Duke of Connaught on his left, a few paces to the rear. In ranks of three rode the ¥ings of Norway, Greece, Spain, Bulgaria, Den- mark, Portugal and Belgium, the Aus- trian heir apparent, the Ottoman heir apparent, Prince Fushimi, of Japan; Grand Duke Michael, representing the czar; the Duke of Aosta, representing the king of Italy; Prince Ruprecht, of Bavaria; the Duke of Sparta, the crown prince of Roumania, Prince Henry of the Netherlands, Duke Al brecht of Wurtemberg, the crown prince of Servia, Prince Henry of Rus- sla, the Grand Duke of Hesse, the Grand Duke of Mecklenberg-Streletz, the crown prince of Saxony, the Grand Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, the Prince of Waldeck-Pyrmont, Prince Mohamed Ali of Egypt, Prince Tsal Tao. uncle of the emperor of China; Prince Charles of Sweden, Prince Al bert of Schieswig-Holstein, Prince Ar- thur of Connaught, Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein, the Duke of Fife, Prince George of Cumberland, Prince Alexander of Battenberg, the Duke of Teck, Prince Alexander of Teck, Prince Francis of Teck, Prince Maximilian of Baden, Prince Andrew burg and Gotha, Prince Dunilo of Mon- tenegro, Prince Christopher of Greece, the Duc d'Alencon, Comte d'Ru and three other Orleans princes, the crown prince of Siam, Prince Leopold of Co | burg and Prince Wolrad of Waldeck- | Pyrmont. The crown equerry, General Ewart, rode along behind this company of mounted rolayties. Then came a glass | paneled coach and pair, in which the | gueen mother, the dowager New Jersey Representative Challenges United States Senator to Deny Truth of Statement or to Make a Reply. Declaring it is necesswsy to buy & seat in the United States «enate from New Jersey, Charles N. Fowler, insur- | gent member of congress from the Fifth New Jersey district, issued a public statement announcing his opposition to the reelection of Senator John Kean, and charging that Kean, with Speager Cannon, and Daniel 8. Voor- hees, state treasurer, were in a deal to prevent him from being sent back to congress. In direct and unmistakable language Mr. Fowler declares: “Of all the subservient, truculent, o ed gle y: of | literal ‘me-too’s’ and perfect cuckoos, carriag e Louis of Batten- of all the political poodle dogs that Senator Aldrich prized most highly, undoubtedly Senator Kean wears the blue ribbon. “But Senator Kean will not succeed himself if the people of the state have anything to say about it. “However, under the old practice by which the candidate for the United States senate has been furnishing the election expenses to the candidates for the assembly and senate of the state, he would undoubtedly have a good chance to find his way in again. But are thé people going to continue this rotten, corrupt, polluting policy when it is in their power to name their own senator, make New Jersey militant in political morality, and save the good name of the state from the degrada- tion of being called a ‘rotten borough’ and a ‘cesspool of political corrup- tion?" Mr. Fowler, in his statement, which reviews at length his services and his deposition by Speaker Cannon from the chairmanship of the committee on currency, makes these charges: “Convinced from all the facts in the case that John Kean and Daniel 8S. Voorhees entered into a corrupt polit- ical deal, I deem it my duty under the circumstances to state the facts and point out my. position on several pub- lic questions for a more complete and perfect understanding between the | people of the Fifth congressional dis- of Greece, Prince Philip of Saxe-Co- trict and myself. “The corrupt contract which I have been compelled to conclude was en- tered inte by John Kean and Daniel S. Voorhees was quadrilateral, or con- sisted of four distinct propositions. “One—Voorhees wanted to be elect. ed state treasurer and therefore bar- gained for the four votes from Union county. “Two—John Kean wanted to cut my political career short, and therefore bargained for the delegates from Mor- and Princess Louise and Princess Vic | ris county to consummate this pur toria rode. A similar coach followed, occupied by Queen Mary, the queen of Norway, the Duke of Cornwall and his sister, Princess Mary. Then there were four coaches filled with princesses be- longing to or immediately related to the British royal family, and another carrying the Chinese prince and the members of the Chinese mission, all the foregoing being royal Mr. Roosevelt, the special ambassa- dor from the United States, and M. Pichon, the French foreign minister, | rode side by side in the eighth car riage of twelve near the end of the procession. Lord Strathcona, Sir G. Reid and Mr. Hall-Jones, representing Canada, Australia and New Zealand respectively, rode together in the ninth carriage. Other carriages were filled with members of the royal suites. After these came detachments of English, Scottish and Irish police as delegations from those forces, follow. ed by a detachment of the London fire brigade. i The arrival of the funeral train at | Windsor was apnounced by the firing | of minute guns. The roadway from the railroad station to St. George's chapel was lined with soldiers, who presented arms as the body of the king passed on its gun carriage. The last touch of mediaevalism came when Sir Alfred Scott Scott-Gatty, as Garter king of arms and therefore chief heraldic officer of Great Britain, under the earl marshal, announced in solemn rin. ing tones that the last earthly scene dealing with “his most excellent majesty Edward VIL, by the grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British dominions beyond the seas king, defender of the faith, emperor of India,” was closed. I" Coughing Spell Réstores Voice. Nelson Keller, proprietor of a ho tel at Wilkes-Barre, Pa., who, after being speechless for the past three weeks, went to Philadelphia on Mon: day to consult a specialist, recov- Mogday, 19 saul 8 clalist, Sooy: ered his voice ; : manner before he saw the physician. He had just alighted from the train at the Reading Terminal when he had a se- vere attack of coughing, and when it ended he found he had recovered his voice and that it was as strong and creal as ever, A —— a — ' Diphtheria In Hens’ Dish. Herman Maloy, two years old, the son of John Maloy, a resident of Lake Nuangola, Pa., contracted diphtheria in a peculiar manner. The little fellow was playing in the back yard, when he drank water from a platter which was used by the chickens. He at once contracted diphtheria. A physician said the chickens were suffering from roup, a form of diph- theria, and had infected the water. The child is in a critical condition. Ice Cream After Grip Kills. Eating ice cream while recovering from an attack of grip, Lucy E. Ness, twenty-three, a popuiar, York, Pa, girl, expired suddenly from neuralgia of the heart in the arms of Henry Houck, a friend. Houck brought the delicacy to the girl and spend the evening at her bed- gide. As he arose to leave she gave a cry of pain and died as he clasped her half-raised body. pose by defeating my renomination. “Three—John Kean wanted to suc- ceed himself as United States sena- tor and therefore bargained that the assemblymen and senator from Mor- ris couniy vote for him for United States senator. “Four—John Kean was willing and anxious to pay the ‘freight,’ whatever it might amount to; in other words, to spend whatever money was neces sary to be re-elected. “John Kean and Daniel 8. Voorhees are placemongers, pure and simple. They are office brokers. They are po: litical merchants. But these two self- constituted proprietors of the voters of Union and Morris counties call themselves leaders. Leaders in what? It the moral growth, progress, ad- vancement and elevation of the people, which is the very soul of our national life, must depend upon such leader- ship as theirs, God help this repub- He!” In conclusion, Mr. Fowler challeng- es Senator Kean to enter a defense or to make any answer at all to his charges, Fine Ex-Governor $2000 For Smuggling Former Governor Frank West Rol- lins, of New Hampshire, was indicted by the federal grand jury in New York for attempted smuggling. He pleaded guilty befcre Judge Hand in the Unit ed States circuit court and was fined New Hampshire's former executive, his wife and son, Douglas Rollins, were arrested on a complaint sworn to by Customs Inspector Matthew P. Cassidy at the Cunard dock on May 18, after they had debarked from the Lusitania. In their declaration the Rollins family had sworn to the pos- session of only one dutiable article, a fur coat valued at $800, but a search of the nine trunks which accompanied them revealed an amount of dutiable goods undeclared, which the indict- ment of the grand jury returned placed at $4736.14. Sr Youth Kills His Father. Victor Walton, eighteen years old, shot and killed his father, near Hunt- ington, W. Va. because the parent tried to coerce him into returning home to a grief stricken mother. Young Walton had left home to work in a coal mine. The father went to the boy’s boarding house and took his clothes away. When the youth return- e dto his home for his clothes, father and mother met him on the doorstep. Angered at his father’s ruse the young man shot him dead on the door- step and inflicted flesh wounds on a brother who tried to interfere. Young Walton is in jail. Dry Dock Dewey Sinks. A report has been received in Washington from Manila, Philippine Islands, that the floating dry dock Dewey, which was towed from the At- lantic seaboard to Manila, a wonderful feat, was sunk there in seventy feet of water. - According to the account the valves had been opened and for some unac- countable reason could mot be closed in time to prevent the mammoth dry dock from sinking. It is believed that the Dewey can be raised, but that her intricate ma. chinery may be ruined. SAYS RAILROADS BOSS CONGRESS. Declares Morgan and Rockefeller Con. trol 200,000 Miles of Track—Shows How Rates Have Been Increased. Washington, May 26.—Senator Lar Follette, of Wisconsin, launched an at- tack on the railroad bill in the senate, declaring that instead of increases in freight rates there should be de- creases, His speech was In support of the Cummins amendment to the bill, which would require the approval of the interstate commerce commission before increases in rates could be put into effect. It is expected that the final vote on the bill, with the sections regulating capitalization eliminated, will be taken in the senate either Saturday or early next week. Saying that of the 240,000 miles of railroads in the United States, six great groups controlled 200,000 miles, Mr. LaFollette found that there was really little variety of interest in rail road ownership in the United States, leaving the control practically in one gigantic trust. He found Morgan and Rockefeller at the head of the entire fabric and predicted that ultimately those two names would stand not only for the financial but for the production and transportation interests as well. “There is not one line in the stat- utes to give the people reasonable railroad rates,” declared Senator La- Follette, in opening his speech. “All | that has been accomplished is to af- ford a means of giving equal rates to shippers.” | The interest of the shipper was by | no means the interest of thie general people generally were as much enti tled to protection as the shippers. ' Forty years ago the fight began with ' that end in view, he said, and it was | as much a fight against extortion as | against discrimination, but in the for- mer respect there had been an utter ‘ failure. | The senator emphasized his conten- tions on a huge chart to show the rel | ative imporiance of the various rail road “groups.” “The interstate commerce commis- sion is engaged in mere child's play,” he said, adding that it was so hedged about that it could not effectively deal with the prcblem. “The rules of the senate seem to be so formed as to prevent one from speaking the truth. The railroads have been having their way for forty years, We have the sins of many congresses to atone for before we permit this bill to go from our hands.” While the rate regulation provision of the president's original bill was in ! the public interest, Mr. LaFoullette said, the provision had been modified by Senators Aldrich and Elkins wholly in the interest of the railroads. Since Jan. 1, he said, the rates on wool from St. Louis and Duluth to New York had increased 17 and 18 per cent; on grain and grain products, domestic from St. Louis to New York, 18 per cent, and from Chicago to New York, 30 per cent; Missouri river points to East St. Louis, 23 per cent, and the rates on horses and mules between St. Paul and Lacrosse, 10 per cent. Out of a multitude of rates to be- come effective June 1 he cited the fol- lowing: Agricultural implements, Chi- cago to St. Paul, 13% per cent; brick, St. Paul to Chicago, 16 2-8 per cent; cement, St. Paul to Chicago, 25 per cent; harness (C. L.), St. Paul to Chi- cago, 15 per cent; hides (green salt), St. Paul to Chicago, 24.3 per cent; paints, Chicago to St. Paul, 16.4 per cent; wagons, Lake City, Minn., to St. Louis, 14.4 per cent; wool, St. Paul to Chicago, 15 per cent. Charge Murder to Steel Concerns. “Human slaughter houses” is the designation of steel manufacturing concerns in Pennsylvania, given at a hearing before the senate committee on public health and national quaran- tine in connection with the Owen bill providing for the creation of a depart: ment of labor and health. It was charged that in the hospitals of these plants “wilful murder” was committed on the theory that dead men were less expensive than cripples. fils « wg directed at the Beth- company. These sensational statements were made by Arthur E. Holder, legislative agent of the American Federation of Labor. He promised to give the com- mittee with a statement giving the source of his information. Mr. Holder told the committee that responsible representatives of labor organizations during the strike at the Pressed Steel Car company’s works at McKees Rocks advertised that con- cern as a “human slaughter house.” “A few days ago,” said Mr. Holder, “I was sitting in the office of a Penn- sylvania member of congress and was informed that in the hospital of one of the Pennsylvania steel concerns ‘wilful murder’ was committed when it was found that it would be better for the company to have a dead man than a ‘cripple.’ ” Cremated by Electricity. Two trainmen were killed and their bodies cremated by 33,000 volts of electricity, when a Peoria sleeper on the Illinois Traction company’s system collided with an electric freight train near Lovelace, Ill. Overhead electric wires fell on the cars in the freight train and set fire to the wreckage. The men who were killed were enmesked by the wires in the wreckage. Found Check For $185,000. As they were walking along a busi | ness street in South Bethlehem, | Pa. two foreigners found a letter, ' which when opened was found to con- , tain a check for $185,000, made out in | public, he asserted. He declared the === BULLETIN. SUMMER thought about yours yet? No country on the face delightful summer resorts near neighbor, Canada. + The Pennsylvania Rai leading resorts of North If you have grown tired Any Ticket A favor of a Pittsburg concern by the ' Bethlehem Steel company. An office i had “ | a had ites given the letter to mail Whee rouse for Fach table and Mrs. Lucy Maull, thirty-five years of | 5242 street, Wilmington, Del., shot herself BO aBeES AND ROOMERS 795. ES vesaame SP | soc Enns Mifflinburg, Pa. contest 5510-4 oe wath the chrom eduests of many member} in ISIC | m—— EE) LE a - Eye Specialist. in Federal nT in Er Summer Vacations. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD |S ti timsruem Summer Excursion Book on June 1, and you wi a wonderful help in plotting out your summer trip. It contains descriptions of about eight hundred of the New Advertisements. ! Legal Notices. at once to Por A, | TRE Elko. THE MIFFLINBURG POULTRY CO., 55-16-6t* LEE A. C. MANN, Mgr. te ss. IIIT Mill Hall, Pa, Eye Specialist. We are authorized to announce Hon. THURSDAY, JUNE ISTH AND 16TH. M. Dimeling, of Clearfield county. ss a To my Pations ahd the Publis “ Demet ier dh | Tony sears and. my bonnes Increning 1910. — A the 16 make a ae ANNOUNCEMENT. REDUCTION OF 25 PER CENT. FROM MY the offce of the Geena everybody can have the best eye treat of 30 eats’ Paving Democratic of a at tr Poe a A AL very, in mares to be Saturday , June ae. learning or studies Should have their ex- oh REL serve and see if they need glasses. $0 SECURE be ERSTE So of conidence. Sincerely and 5332t PROF. J. ANGEL, Eye Specialist. JE ves. ats ” Er —_——_———— VACATIONS. The time is coming for summer outings. Have you of the globe contains so many as the United States, with its Iroad will issue its Jopules nd it America, lists of hotels and boarding houses at these various places, a map, routes and rates from the principal stations on the Pennsylva- nia Railroad, and other valuable information. of the resort you have visited for years, you may make a selection from this book fora “stay of a day, a week, a month, or the whole summer. You may plot out an extended tour covering moun- tain and seashore, or a fishing trip, or a hunting jaunt, by rail or boat or a combination of both. nt of the Pennsylvania Railroad wil be glad to furnish a copy of this valuable book for Ten Cents, or it will be mailed you Twenty-five Cents, by Geo. W. Boyd, General Passen- ger Agent, Philadelphia, Pa. postpaid, on receipt of 65-20-2t. The First National Bank. ol dd i a Bl A Be BB A le le Oe Ie OM EN a It Makes No Difference small amount If there is assistance. as as As AB BB SB DA DE BB AB BB BB BM A A BM AM In what business you are engaged, . what amount of money you you need a bank account. It matters not that you have but a handle, to open an account with, you need one and this bank offers its services. any information you wish+on the subject come in or write us; we will do all we can to be of The First National Bank, Bellefonte, Pa. 54-49-1y AT BROCKEPHOFF HOUSE, WEDNESDAY AND Administrator Daniel Flanigan, Deceased. DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.—Let- of administration the estate of . W. Larimer, FRAN A EC he Le he 3 payment, nd those claims against Ee recs Suly datlieueded west Pine Grove Mills, Pa. Administr ator GEO. B. JOHNSTON, a. Cory P. O. Box 486, Beaver Falls. P Real Estate For Sale. : FOR SALE-Two ice homes in One S00 oe $500, Much etter induce: Tor LL. C Why Pay 35 to 40 cents for butter when you can buy . ... High Grade Oleomagarine from me at 25 cents per pound. R. S. BROUSE, Bush Arcade, ~~ 5445 Bellefonte. Pa. Automobiles. a BUICK IS HERE. ARRANGE FOR DEMONSTRATION. Second Hand Cars For Sale and Accessories. W. W. Keichline & Co. South Water St. Bellefonte. Pa. LIVERY 55-1-1y a Be BB Bo A AB AM Me AM. DM ) ) , ) b J > ) { q { : ) ) ; ) PPT PY OY YY PY UY Y TT TTT TY TY TY we ve ew Limej and [Crushed Limestone. Lumber. BUILDING MATERIAL Use Hydrated Lime (H-O), through quick results, or use ordinary lime, You Farmers and Agriculturists: .Your land must have Lime if you want to raise paying crops. But be Sure to Use Lime Lime for Chemical and Building Purposes. Limestone crushed to any size. Fine Limestone for Walks, etc. All sizes of Limestone. Works at Bellefonte, Frankstown, Spring Meadows, Tyrone Forge and Union Furnace. PROMPT SHIPMENTS. ALL RAILROAD CONNECTIONS. your drill or broadcast when voulseed, for fresh forkings, or lime for general use. When you are ready for it, you will get it here. On LUMBER, MILL WORK, ROOFING, SHINGLES AND GLASS. Write for information to American Lime & Stone Company, Office: TYRONE, PA. 554-ly. - The largest ime manufacturers in Pa. AN ESTIMATE? BELLEFONTE LUMBER CO. 5251y. | Bellefonte, Pa. Bema : Crit Tasers de Ter Sciock Ar th day a ATTACHED. l Di slaa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers