ENGLAND WINS HER MAIN POINTS. | Denton Fowler, assistant treasurer of Ruling Will Keep New England Fish ermen Qut of Canadian Bays—Colo nies May Adopt Laws Affecting Treaty Rights. | dropped the treasurer's suitcase con Ec ———— Murderers Drop Loot to Escape. The band’ts who murdered woung the Atlas Building Materia! comp ny. at Hudscr, N. Y., and his nezrn driver, George Rag:is'e, fied throuz: the woods in such haste that they | taining $5600 in gold, silver an 1 bills. The international court of arbitra Police Chief James J. Lane and Sn | + tion at The Hague has rendered its] perintendent Jerry Lecnmard, of the decision in the Newfoundland fisheries Atlas “rickyards, stumbled upon the case submitted by the United States | cash bag while they were beating up and Great Britain, but which involved the thickets with a party of armed ROOSEVELT URGES FEDERAL CON. | TROL Mr. Roosevelt visited another state capital. He came into Minnesota with the cheers of the west still ringing in his ears. He was received by thou sands of men and women, who were wild in their enthusiasm. It was the grandest reception that the colcnel has yet encountered on his tour, and no one realized it better than he. The colonel talked conservation in | H. de Vere Stacpoole’s fascinating romance “The the local governments of Canada and Newfoundland. i Neither country wins a clear-cut sward. The general issue was presented in the form of seven questions or points. On these the tribunal supports the United States in five and Great Bri tain in the other two. The British consider thé points de- cided in their favor, Nos. 1 and 5, as of the highest importance, and it is understood that the colonial office is satisfled with the outcome. On No. 1. however, the United States has raised certain questions of equity, which will be submitted to a special commission. It is also significant that the court | was unanimous on all questions ex- cept the fifth, and from the decision of this Luis Drago, member from the Argentine Republic, gave a dissenting | opinion larzely supporting the Ameri. can contentions. On all others of the main questions | the tribunal sustains the principal con- tentions of America. The court finde | that the claims of Great Britain to N right to prohibit American vessels | from employing foreigners, and to im- | men. Lane and Leonard found no* onlv the money : at Dent Fowler had been hurrying with to the Atlas brickmak ers, but within a few steps of where Mr. Fowler and the plucky nezro had been shot to death they came upon the weapone the robbers had usei in| the killing. a Winchester repeating | refle, a shotgun and two revolvere Searching on their hands and knees through the wet bush, they found two caps, such as Italian laborers com monly wear in this part of the coun- try; two red bandanna handkerchiefs | which had been plerced with eyeholes | and used for masks; the scattered . fragments of an envelope and the let ter the envelope had contained, and. | the scrap strewn spot, a tiny clearing surrounded by almost impenetrable | thickets of thornbush where the rob- bers had made camp while they waited | for young Fowler's buggy. Fowler and his negro driver were shot dead and robbed by masked men | while on their way to pav off the men. Gunner Kills Man In Boat With Him. Norman Fleeson, twenty-three years old, of Philadelphia, was accidentaily | pose light harbor customs and other | shot and killed by one of two com ' pan- Sjtics ae unauthorized by the treaty ;,,. while hunting reed birds in a St. Paul, ana he took occasion to en- dorse part of President Taft's address, but he was careful his praise did not go far. His position in regard to the control of natural resources was made unmistakibly clear, for he hemmered away at that phase of the new na- | tionalism that insists that federal con- trol shall be stronger than state con- trol. { When he did refer to Mr. Taft and the reference was a compliment, dele gates and the thousands in the galler- ies cheered. The reference was an in- terpolation in the former president's | ania | set speech. It was: | “Much that I have to say on the subject of conservation will be but a repetition of what was so admirably | said from this platform Monday.” Again he sald: “All friends of comservation should be in heartiest agreement with the | policy which the president laid down in connection with the coal, oil and phosphate lands, and 1 am glad to be able to say that at its last session con- | gress finally completed the work of separating the surface title to the land ! from the mineral beneath it.” Strong For National Control. The question of federal or state con- The tribunal finds that the regula- tion of the manner, time and imple, ments of fishing which Great Britain | or Newfoundland enforces must be! reasonable and appropriate, but Great | Britain cannot be the sole judge of their reasonableness. In case of disagreement the question | must be determined by an impartial | tribunal like The Hague, or a special | commission. On question six, which presented | the claim of Great Britain to exclude fishermen from the bays and harbors on the treaty coasts of Newfoundland | and the Magdaler islands, the tribu- nal declares, without qualification, in| favor of America. Dealing with question five, which | was decided adversely to the United States, the court followed the strict | letter of the British-American treatv, | whereby America renounced the right to fish in any bays on non-treaty | coasts. The court holds that this renuncie- | i tion applied to all bays, irrespective of their size, instead of to small bays only, as was contended by the Ameri- cans. The arbitrators were not ngsl; mous on this question. Regarding point one, on which the | American counsel have raised ques- tions of equity, the tribunal holds that; the right of Great Britain to make | fishing regulations without the consent | of America is inherent in her sover- eignty. But in the exercise of the right to make limited regulations these must not violate the treaty of 1818 or be so framed as to give the local fisher- men an advantage over the Ameri cans. The provisions of the award apply not only to future legislation by the imperial government and the colonies, but require that the existing statutes and regulations, to which the Ameri. cans have objected, be submitted to a commission which shall judge of their reasonableness, necessity and fairness in the light of the principles laid down by the tribunal. In connection with its decision that the reasonableness of the fishing regu- lations must be determined through expert information the tribunal directs the appointment of a commission of specialists, calls upon America and Great Britain to designate their com- missioners within a month, and ap- points as a third commissioner Dr. Hoek, scientific adviser of fisheries of the Netherlands. Killed In Salocn Hold-Up. : The Silver Bow saloon, at Silve~ Bow, a railroad junction seven miles west of Butte, Mont., was held up by three masked bandits and robbed. A man believed to be U. V. Sims failed to respond to the command to throw up his hands and was shot dead. Three suspects were arrested later near Sil- ver Bow. Storm Wrecks Circus Tent. Twenty members of the Phillips Dramatic company narrowly escaped death as the main tent collapsed in a fierce wind storm at Federalsburg, Md. Actors and actresses made hair- raising escages from flying poles. All were caught under the tent, hut were rescued by townspeople. Green Apples Caused Death. Julia Donahue, thirteen years old, died from eating green apples at Hol- yoke, Mass. James R. Keene III. James R. Keene, the noted New York financier and horseman, was taken seriously ill with pneumonia at the Phoenix hotel, in Lexington, Ky. Physicians were summoned, and his brother-in-law, Major F. A. Dainger field, hurried over to the scene in au automobile from his country estate at Casteleton, near Lexington. Mr. Keene arrived here from New York, accompanied only by his valet After an examination the physicians announced Mr. Keene's condition t be serious. His relatives in the eas: have been telegraphed and are hurry ' boat on the Pennypack creek, near Holmesburg. The fatal shot was fired by William Campbell. The third man in the boat was Charles Schaeffer. Campbell and Schaeffer were almost in a state of collapse when they gave themselves up te the police at the Tacony station. They said that Fleeson was sitting, | gun in hand, in the bow of the skiff. | Campbell and Schaeffer were in the | stern, the latter poling. Fleeson spied a covey of reed birds close by and rose to his feet, putting his gun to his shoulder to shoot. Campbell saw the birds simultaneously and, taking quick aim, blazed away. The charge entered the back of | Fleeson's head and he dropped back- ward into the boat at the feet of his horrified friends. Death was instanta- neous, the shot, fired at such close range, carrying away part of Fleeson’s skull. New Head of Mines Bureau. Dr. J. A. Holmes, chief of the tech- nological branch of the geological sur- vey, was appointed by President Taft director of the new bureau of mines. He succeeds George Otis Smith, who has been acting director since July 1. The appointment of Dr. Holmes came as a complete surprise. He was known as one of the men in the in- terior department who was regarded by Secretary Ballinger as inimical to | him. He was labeled by Mr. Ballinger i as one of the “snakes” whom he in- tended to “kill.” Heaviest Baby Girl. A girl weighing fifteen pounds and fourteen ounces was born to Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. McGinty, of Frank lin, Pa. Tke weight was made on ac curate scales by Dr. H. P. Hammond of Franklin, who says he believes this a record for girls. The medical records tell of a few boys weighing sixteen pounds, but no girls weighing within three or four pounds of that figure. This is the tenth child in the McGinty The family, the others being boys. father is a laborer. Abruzzi Wins Rich Prize. The Duke of the Abruzzi has had a . bulk freight trol of water power sites is the one before the congress that has given rise to the most animosity. The presi- dent avoided committing himself on this point, leaving it for congress to decide. The colonel declared himself vigorously for federal control. In this connection he said: “There is apparent to the judicious observer a distinct tendency on the part of our opponents to cloud the is- sue by raising the question of state as against federal jurisdiction. We are ready to meet that issue if it is forced upon us. But there is no hope for the plain people in such conflicts of juris- dictions. “The essential question is not ome of hair-splitting legal technicalities. It is simply this: Who can best regulate the special interests for the public good? Most of the predatory corpora- tions are interstate of have interstate affiliations. Therefore they are largely out of reach in effective state control, and fall of necessity within the feueral jurisdiction. The most effective wea- pon against these great corporations, most of which are financed and owned on the Atlantic coast, will be federal laws and the federal executive. That is why I so strongly oppose the de- mand to turn these matters over to the . sta In a number of other parts of his speech Colonel Roosevelt showed that his attitude was for strong national control. He made a strong plea for the development and regulation of all the waterways and urged specifically that these be guarded from the “interests” and that the railroads be prevented from controlling them in the future as they have in the past. Here the president injected extem- poraneously: “There are classes of which can always go cheaper and better by water if there is an adequate waterway, and the ex- istence of such type of waterway in itself helps to regulate railroad rates.” | He declared that any railroad con- nection with water lines should be un- der the “strictest regulation of the in ' terstate commerce commission.” He | also asserted that the necessity of ' federal control of the forests had been proved and urged the formation of a ” stroke of good luck, due directly to an | | federal bureau of health, declaring the act of generosity. Attracted by a lit- financial waste to the nation in sick- tle girl begging in the street in Rome, | Ness and preventable deaths to be ap- and desirous of helping her, the duke | palling. purchased from her a lottery ticket, | which has drawn a prize of $18,000. The duke announced that he would’ give the money to the girl. The former president took a little shot at Congressman James A. Taw- ney, of Minnesota. It was ostensibly to | combat the renomination of Mr. Taw- ' ney that Gifford Pinchot absented him- What was acknowledged by the dog | here. onday When President Taft was show judges to be the finest bull whan Colonel Roosevelt came to dog in the world, and one for which | gna part of his speech referring to the its owner, Walter Jefferies, refused pga¢jonal conservation commission, he $60,000 a few weeks ago, has just died | 4514 of the introduction into the house ing to his bedside. suddenly in London. It was named’ Dick stone. Rodney Stone, for which Richard Cro ker paid $50,000. 4,766,883 People In New York. *Census returns show the population of Greater New York to be 4,766,883, an increase of 1,329,681, or 38.7 per| cent, as compared with 3,437,202 in 1900. New York Thus holds its position as the second city of the world. Woman Mob’s Victim. Dangling from a trestle just outside Graceville, Fla., were found the bodies of Ed Christian, colored, charged with shooting Deputy Sheriff Allen Burns, and Hattie Bowman, also colored. She had been arrested on the charge of being implicated in the crime. Mother and Three Daughters Drowned. ‘While returning from a picnic in a rowboat, Mrs. W. J. Deimal and her three young daughters, of Cincinnati, were wn in the Licking river. Their rowboat ran into a submerged log and upset. Car Kills Trapped Man. Siler Cole,, a yard conductor for the Buffalo & Susquehanna railroad, was held prisoner in a frog until run down by a car at Galeton, Pa. His leg was crushed to the hip and he. died... He was a grandson of of representatives by a congressman from Minnesota of an amendment to ' the civil service bill, which, he said, ‘was designed to put an end to the work of the commission. His recital ! threw the croavd into an uproar. A man fn the balcony shouted: “Now what do i you think of Tawney?” The colonel went on to say that the | subject came up just at the close of his | term in the White House. If he had re- br mained precident, he said, he would have paid no attention to this provis- | fon of law. because he believed it fn be unconstitutional. This declaration was applauded loudly. Nearly 100,000 Greet T. R. | The conservation congress, while it was a big affair, didn't compare with the teremendous cryowd that Mr Roosevelt faced at the Minnesota state fair grounds. A gathering estimated at between 95,000 and 100,000 persons jammed themselves into the enclosure and most of them heard the colonel make a long speech. The management declared that Roosevelt drew the larg est crowd of persons that ever this state heard of. In the hotel! lobbies and om the streets one hears arguments as to who drew the greater crowds, Roosevelt or Taft The consensus of opinion very strongly favors Roosevelt. It was a re spectable. cordial reception that Mr. Taft got. Roosevelt got the whoops and the shouts. . BOOKS, MAGAZINES, ETC. FREE NEXT SUNDAY.—As high class as any 25 or 35-cent magazine to be had at the news stands is the Monthly Magazine Section of the Pittsburg "Eye Speaiatiat, Prof. J. Angel. Eye Specialist. | Sunday Dispatch, which comes free with that ex- | cellent newspaper on the second Sunday of each month. The September number, which will be AT BrockEruorr HOUSE, WEDNESDAY AND out next Sunday, September 11, is the best ever. Man in Black,” will be concluded, and complete , To, Foirons 00 the By ehed in Bellefont short stories will include “On the Sultan'sRoad,” © for years my business increasing by Leo Crane; “The Headliner,” by Randolph the as a successful eye specialist, Bartlett; “When Red Was White,” by Roy Stew- to a art; “The Weapons of Eve,” by Lily Long; “The REDUCTION OF 25 PER CENT. FROM MY City,” by Frederick Amold Kummer; “The FORMER CHARGES King's Caprice,’ by James Hopper, and others. | that can have the best treat There will be vignettes by Edwin Bjorkman, a eat 0 El oarents’ having charming cover design in four colors entitled school shildy fen who 2510 Yery beight in “Mischief,” and many other pleasing features and see if they need “By 30 Aside from the magazine section the Sunday Dis’ patch proper will be loaded to the guards with in. teresting special illustrated features, a complete woman's section and all that makes for a com. plete Sunday newspaper. If you are not already a subscriber to the Sunday. Dispatch, get in your order without delay. New Adveriiveménts. Grangers at Centre Hall. SALE—A fine farm near Centre Ha SEED A Rl 55-35.1t aa SE a, L vans. ris. and m2 at re oo | F, STORE fares ( FF Sofi trent minimum fare Will be sid 9to or gad RR New Advertisements, wh following properties of the estate of Joseph BRIE} CREEE FARM: on situated within She Dorauan limits of O° fmt Pinder nat eti"o Brgghe Ef La bd BALD EAGLE TOWNSHIP FARM. Th | Ee a A Pom il : with bam out Country Butter — om One large two Wanted em ag ithe borough ' KEATING PROPERTY. WE PAY |, Logated at Keating, .ontheP. &E. a For Country Butter a Ib 28¢c For Fresh Eggs per doz 25c WE SELL Granulated Sugar a Ib 6¢ Pure Sugar Syrup a gt 10c Pure Lard per pound - 17c Pink Salmon per can - 10c Good Rio Coffee a pound 15¢ Tomatoes, Peas, Corn, Pie Peaches, Oys- ters, Pumpkin and Baked Beans, 3 cans for 25 cents. water and all con- with cgi ak a LOTS AT AVIS. PA. ios mon chic, dng set cy lots and parts oo information see or ad- dress Mrs. H. R Golder, the Mrs. S. K. Booth Creek, Pa., Aug. 23rd. WSs Great Reductions all Shoes. Sint Ly Tea ons on als and to extend ci oo ————— successful. State College Supply Co., aan RM. ae, wu ing ot ra *55-33-1t State College, Pa. The First National Bank. A BANK ACCOUNT We do not advise any one to be a miser, for avery man owes himself the necessary comforts of life; neither do we advise to be known as a “spender” by your associates. It may sound flattering but the man who has a bank account and saves at least a small part of his stands head and shoulders above the spendthrift in any community. The First National Bank, Bellefonte, Pa. 54-40-1y CAPITAL $100,000 SURPLUS $125,000 Ba A De AB. DE. BA. DE. De. De. BD DM. DA BM. BA A New Advertisements. — mE = OST. Howard Coen, face gol face gold watch, if AE, by leaving a at wi SE i same office. 55-30 F= SALE.—Model 10 Baby Buick, Tour jon. Ad pRtscnser. perfect as Why Pay 35 $0 40 conts for buster when you can buy... High Grade Oleomagarine from me at 22 cents per pound. R. S. BROUSE, Saddlery. New Departure in Business must think well of any Di iY: Seat will save you some on a set of Single Harness. 0 itis pte you to make us Eg SCHORIELD'S MAIL ORDER DEPT. at home goods better Ba at less money, with a guarantee money ee A Set of Harness in Nickle or Imi- tation Rubber, at.. . $12.85 This harness is equal to any S15 set onthe Genuine Rubber............ $14.85 which has no equal for less than $17. should accompany © " cut of the Address all oh to E. NN. SCHOFIELD. Ort lefonie Pa. to which he will Shcasiully givelis prompt GUARANTEE—The e above goods are as rep Bush Arcade, 54-34-16t Bellefonte. Pa. James "Schofield, : ’ < ¢ ; Spring Street 55-32 Bellefonte, Pa $ dovrarrirarosamaran 'N : ”» 2 : ; b : : : BUILDING MATERIAL ‘ When you are ready for it, you will get it here. On LUMBER, MILL WORK, ROOFING, SHINGLES AND GLASS. This is the place where close and Ct the ments of ale of . AN ESTIMATE? BELLEFONTE LUMBER CO. Grange Exhibition. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD SPECIAL TRAINS ACCOUNT PATRONS OF HUSBANDRY GRANGE PARK CENTRE HALL, PA. WILL BE RUN AS FOLLOWS: Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, September 13, 14, and 15, 1910. EASTWARD. We tWamn. September 13, 14 and 1] Se STATIONS. Cif gh 1000A.M. 630 P.M. 550 A. M. 1045 P. M. 1005 6B “ Lenn 10.39 . 1009 © 639 * l...odocous 1038 « WZ ves ee un 1021 « 1026 © 656 “ (6s * 1015 © 030 * 70d) - G19 = | 1010 « 1 “ “ “ —— 730 P.M[635 A M. “900 P.M. TH" rieerermn 8.50 BY TA rarer ee Sa te ron BO. * Toizisdrioi 830 “ See 10 * 700 “ 820 “
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers