| out of the yard when Charley came to her | rescue just in time. : On Wednesday while the members of the N. T. CHARLES H. AUMAN RESIGNS.—Charles H. Auman has resigned as principai LH the Bellefonte High school to accept principalship of the Danville High school | Fi ei iA their i San at a salary of $1,200 a year. He was | ploded and set fire tothe carpet. Passersby who elected out of a list of forty-five appli- | saw the fire forced an entrance to the house and cants. Mr. Auman came to Bellefonte | succeeded in smotheringthe flames before they . gained much headway. two and a half years age as assistant At 2 akithe ove principal of the High school and when | 4 (pis 0ord the following teachers were Mr. Wagner was elected borough supe slecied for the enpying etm: High school pringk i dent he was promoted to princi . White; ve grammar, H. Sle he filled two terms. His work | M. Walker; primary, Miss Ward; Branch, Mr. . Reed; Pine Hall, Gertrude Keichline; Oak Grove, here was so satisfactory that at a recent | yy ‘Boy Krumrine, N. N. Hartswick: Cen. meeting of the school board he was elect | tre, Florence Kepler: Glades, Alpha Houser; ed for the ensuing year, but the entice- Tattle. Mis Salinger, Catesburg, Ralph ment of a very substantial increase in sal. | Parpster; Marengo, Ost ; leyville ary induced him to make application for a . Ng. Baise: ayy: Nasby Seber. the principalship of the Danville High i such a large number of applicants is a compliment to his ability. The potato fields look badly now as the blight has struck them. i Hay making and harvesting are practically | things of the past. | The oats will soon be ready to cut, then, as the | old saying is, fall is at the door. Mrs. C. D. Houtz, who has been quite ili the | last two weeks, is slowly improving. We have had some good rains during the past | ~The entertaining in Bellefonte dur- ing the past week included a surprise party given by Miss Helen Williams Thursday night, for her sister Lucretia, up- pon her return from a visit at Harrisburg; Mrs. Wilkinson's dinner Friday in honor of Miss Powell's guests; Mrs. Thomas R. week and the weather is much cooler Hayes’ party to Snow Shoe and dinner at Wilson Rogers, will make his home, from now the .Mountain house Saturday Jpn fot on, with his brother, in Lock Haven, twenty-six of the younger set and in hon- | Tye people are taking huckleberries from Nit. or of Miss Frances Stevenson, Janet | tany mountain by the bushel this week. Scott's guest; the second of a series of | The Shiloh Lutheran Sunday school will picnic i dances at Hecla park Monday night, eat the Rock school house on Saturday. which were originated by some of the rs. F. C. Peterson and David Will'ans’ three trons town: Mi . | children are visiting among friends in these | TE ae OL the ot yee B the | Pe | The steam thresher is on the road now and the Brockerhoff henge and Mrs. David | crops threshed showed a fair yield of plump ' Dale's card party the same evening; Mrs. | grain | Harry Keller's luncheon Wednesday for The show that stopped at Lemont over Mon. | the visitors in Bellefonte, with those who | day, was well attended, but the snake that they | are entertaining them; Mrs. James Lj Slotie was not as large as the people expect. Potter’s porch party and luncheon and e—— Miss Humes two o'clock dinner, forwhich | go , 0.00 Kills Twenty-one Miners. twelve covers were laid the same day; qyenty.one lives were snuffed out Mrs. T. A. Shoemaker’s morning porch | by an explosion of gas in the Sykes- party Thursday, for Miss Roder, and Mrs- ville shaft of the Cascade Cosy pind Reynolds’ motor party to Spruce Creek Coke company, near Dubois, Pa. club the same evening. Every miner in the southern portion eon of the workings perished. Few of the ——David Roy Simpson, of Altoona, men were killed by the explosion who graduated from State College in the itself, and from the position of the class of 1908, was drowned at Providence, bodies found by rescuing parties it R. L, last Saturday night while in swim. | Was evident that, following the flash, | ming. He was an electrical engineer and | Many of the men gathered up their ; ilroad Pelongings and were endeavoring to worked for the Pennsylvania rail reach an outlet when overcome and | company in Altoona until last November | o,g;04teq by the fatal after damp that when he accepted a position at Provi- jpyariaply folows an explosion of a dence. He was twenty-nine years old gageous nature. and married. Only one victim was mutilated be- EE yond recognition and this was Ralph ——E. J. Eckenroth took arundown t0 yarjanna who was identified by the Milesburg on Sunday in his Mitchell ' phrags number check worn around his car and in the vicinity of the Methodist neck. Most of the dead men bore no church in that town the rear axle broke marks whatever, indicating that death | and the car veered from its course and casi Shrough Aikegtion. a Hirst : : 0 those on the surface the firs crashed into a ‘telephone pole. Tt big knowledge of the explosion came when pretty badly w ed and wil take Sone | the safety door on the big ventilating time to put it in running shape again. . fan was blown open. Immediately a. ps i il jon will be | rescue party under the direction of held = Be Resiges fom niRig July | Fire Boss John Brown descended the 29th, and all members of the clan and | 150f00t shaft to investigate. friends are invited. The same evening a. g.0ang won't Help Japan Fight U. 8. festival will be held at the Buffalo Run’ ~ A revised Anglo.dapanese troaty was Presbyterian church, the proceeds of gigned in London on Friday. which will be devoted to re-roofing the church. PINE GROVE MENTION. The fourth clause corroborates the forecast from Tokio July 11, in which | it was said that Great Britain pro- posed to modify the clause providing . . | for mutual assistance in the event of : Mrs. W. H. Goss is ill with an attack of tonsi- | war, making the provision inapplicable litis. | in the event :uiat either party to the Rain is badly needed. Corn is shriveled and | 4115000 was fighting with a nation pasture dried up. with whom tl.c other had concluded a | Mr. and Mrs, C. M. Dale spent the Sabbath at general arbiiiation treaty. the Kimport home. | The treaty is to run for ten years Mrs. Ira L. Burwell and daughter May are | rom date. ' he most important change | visiting relatives at Tyrone. | from the earlier agreement is embod- Clyde Stemm and wife visited grandpa Horner | joq in the fourth article, providing in the early part of the week. | that if either party concludes a treaty | Col. D. F. Fortney, of Bellefonte, was in town | of general arbitration with a third last Thursday on a legal mission. power, the alliance shall not entail an John C. Dunlap, of St. Benedict, is visiting his | obligation to go to war with that parental home on Chestnut street. | power. Sheridan Moore, the popular drover of Neff's Mills, is buying cows in the valley. Population Center Moving West, Miss Vida Corl, who has been a very sick young The center of population o. the lady the past ten days, is now better. | United States is four and one-qua.ter G. W. McWilliams has been somewhat indis. | miles south of Unionville, Monroe | posed the past week but is better now. county, Indiana, according to a census | Mrs. Geo. Smith had an attack of vertigoon | bureau announcement. ' Monday that gave her friends much concern. Since 1900, when it was six miles Mr. and Mrs. Ross Gilliford and daughter Ruth | southeast of Columbus, Ind. it has are down from Altoona for a few days outing. moved thirty-one miles westward and Comrade David Rossman and wife, of Pleasant | seven-tenths of a mile northward. The Gap, are visiting their sons, Mack. George and | westward movement was more than William. ' twice that of the 1890-1900 decade. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Bowersox are down from Al* | This acceleration of the westward toona, spending several weeks among friends at | movement is attributed by census of- Fairbrook. fluials principally to the growth of the | After a six months visit in the Golden State | Pacific and southwestern states. Miss Sallie Keller returned home last week, de- The geographical center of the | lighted with her trip. United States is in northern Kansas, | Mr. and Mrs. Lee Markie came over from | go that the center of population, there-' State College to spend Sunday at the W.H.Weav | tore, jg about 550 miles east of the er home on Main street. | geographical center of the country. Mr. and Mrs. Hall, of Patterson, N. J.. are mak- | — a ing their mid-summer visit among their many ¢ riends in and around Boalsburg. J. C. McMahon. one of Blair county's noted stockmen, was here last week in quest of blooded cattle. D. W. Thomas had him in tow. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Keichline and Mr. and Mrs. Peter F. Keichline, of Bellefonte, attended the Mrs. Sunday funeral on Wednesday. Prof. S. P. McWilliams, of McDenald, Pa isa visitor at Fairbrook, spending most his vacation with his aged father, G. W. McWilliams. Mrs. Esther Gregory was called to the). P Laporte home at Philipsburg Tuesday, on ac. count of the serious illness of Mrs. Laporte. Mr. and Mrs. James Cummings, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Yoder, of Reedsville, enjoyed a drive over the Seven mountains and visited Penns cave. Rev. R. M. lllingsworth, of Marietta, came up Monday to join his wife and family in their out. ing at grandpa Snyder's home at White Hall. Rev. and Mrs. Samuel J. Pittinger are down in Hagertown, Md., where Mrs. Pittinger's fathe, is very ill as the result of a stroke of paralysis. clsco from Hor vulu. The germ itself, D. L. Dennis sold his farm near town to Clay- | Dr. Clegg sa: has been isolated. ton Struble. The price paid was §,000. The: - purchaser is not to have possession until April 1st Ami rB to Stay. ns cali the bully the CR The Bii:ish foreign office denies the the horns recently C. B. | panort printed *° ke Right Hon. MeComick vs oucked ont he rt umd 1d | Simon Bryce «ies resigning scrap, save that he was injured in his back and as British ambi: so the United head. The animal had chased Mrs. McCormick | States. Live Stock Infected by Hydrophobia, A horse on the farm of John Tay- lor, near Rising Sun, Md. became a victim of rabies and ferociously as- saulted another horse and a mule, bit. | ing them in the neck befere being | shot. Three hogs, two dogs and a cat and a number of chickens have been the victims of hydrophobia and were shot within a period of two weeks, all | the result of a pet dog of the family being affected with the disease for sev- eral weeks before it became known, wnescovers Leprosy Cure. Experiments by the federal leprosy investigators at Homlulu undoubtedly will produce serums and vaccines fatal to leprosy germs, according to Dr. Moses T. Clegg, assistant director of the station, who arrived in San Fran- | Wickersham said, no longer controls | be declared, the prices in all the great | activities "of securities, Mr. Wickersham said. time to see him fall. Dusch said he had been stung only ‘tic &¢« nn of 1910-11 in Erie, Pa., the other day $70,570.10 to the good as a Wants U. S. to Fix Prices. Wickersham Advocate U. 8. Control of industries. Attorney General Wickersham, in a speech before the Minnesota State Bar association in Duluth, took an advanced stand on the further fed- | J eral regulation of corporations, and declared that a government commis- gion to regulate great industrial or- ganizations, in the same way that the interstate commerce commission reg- ulates railways, was not only most de- sirable, but might be absolutely ne- cessary. Mr. Wickersham's speech was little short of sensational in many of its features. He declared that it was a matter of serious consideration wheth- er it would be practical to give to the proposed interstate corporation com- mission the power to fix prices. To do this in theory would simply require an extension of the principle by which the interstate commerce commission controls the rates on railroads. ! The law of supply and demand, Mr. prices in the United States. For years, staple industries have been fixed by an agreement between the principal producers, and not by a normal play of free competition. An interstate commission, the attor- ney general added, would prevent vio- lation of the anti-trust act and aid business men to maintain a continued Harry F. Seltzer and Elizabeth H. Mil- ler, both of Lock Haven. ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. New Advertisements. status of harmony with the require-! ments of the law. | Many of Mr. Wickersham’s declara-' tions were the most radical he has made since his entrance into official life. With the weight of an administra. tion officer behind them, his remarks made a deep impression. There was nothing in the speech to indicate how far the attorney general reflected the views of President Taft. On several occasions in the past, however, he has been regarded as a spokesman for the administration. The attorney general discussed the general question of what further reg- ulation of interstate commerce is ne- ceszary or desirable, from a broad point of view, and said he had not at- tempted to express a conclusion, but merely to state the elements of a great problem which goes to the root of the prosperity of the American peo- | ple. “That some further regulation over corporations carrying on among the states may be necessary,” he sald, “is coming to be a matter of current comment. advocated quite recently by represen- tatives of some of the largest combi- nations of capital, probably as a means of salvation, and to preserve under government supervision great organi- zations where continued existence is menaced by the recent interpretation | of the Sherman act, the disintegration of which would be necessarily attend- ed with much loss. To such, it is a case of ‘any port in a saipwreck. Hetter continued co-operative life, even under a powerful master, than dis- seminated properties and segregated without constant govern- mental supervision.” Mr. Wickersham implied that a fed- eral incorporation act, while it might offer some difficulties, would help te’ lay the axe at the root of trust evils Of this he said: “If congress should enact that no corporation engaged in interstate com- : merce shall hereafter acquire any stock of any other corporation so en- gaged, and that unless all such cor- porations should dispose of all stocks held by them in other corporations en- | gaged in interstate commerce within some specified period, they should be ; . prohibited from carrying on interstate | commerce until they did so dispose of | such stocks, the axe would indeed be | laid at the root of the trust evil.” Exceptions should be made from : the prohibition as might be necessary | to the protection of innocent holders | { Bee Sting Kills Man. | Philip Dusch, a resident of Brady | township, near Dubois, Pa., died with- | in thirty minutes after being stung by i a honey bee. Mr. Dusch went out to | place a cap on a hive and was heard to call. His wife rushed to his side in Before dying once on the point of the jaw. He was sixty-two years old. Evangelistic Work Pays. William A. Sunday, quondam profes- sional base ball player, now profes- sion." revivalist, closed the evangelis- result of his year's work. This return for about tem months’ work, more than the president of the United States has drawn for the same time, is evidence that from z mone- tary standpoint evangelistic work is wore profitable than playing profes- sivnal base bail. Sunday recently re- fused an offer to go back to the ma- jors once more at $500 a month, Breaks Her Leg In Bed. Mrs, Mary Salinsky, cighty years of age, of Allentown, Pa, met with a peculiar accident while she was on a visit to the home of a friend in the country. She twisted her leg in bed in such a manner that she bruke the upper bone of the leg clear in two. Two Drown Changing Seats. Changing seats in a rowboat cost the lives of Carl Glade and Mathew Hillistein in the Chicago river. Life savers rescued the third man, Alvin Mathis, who was found clinging to the overturned craft. Heat Kil's Ca'ev, a Giraffe. Dejeey, » [emale «irae, valued at 86050, died at tae Cincinnati Zoiogical gardens from what is said to be ner commerce Luc It has been openly je, vous prostration from heat and storm. F* SALE.—Fine horse, works here. Sound weight, 40." tncuire SC BART: OST.—Tuesday night Derween the Brocker- hoff house and in street. a of finder by ri The can claim reward. A trustees the Orphans’ Court of Centre county, will offe Dublic sale at the court House. in Bel onte, Pa SATURDAY, AUG. 5th, 1911, at 10 o'clock a. m., all the following described , and tract of situate in Boggs township, Centre county, Pa., bounded and described as fi : i USTEES EOF | 7324, in re-estate of James . Lucas, late | of Boggs township, Centre county, Ivania, | Ea | | | R nin at a stone corner and bein the QF. | ner now or . Resides ancy Lu- EE aie DiNaney grees east thirty-seven five-tenth perches to stones, thence south along lands of same one de- | gree and thirty minutes east and five-tenth perches to a ut and corner of William Poor- man, thence by lands of Poorman south seventy-two es west sixty perches; t land now or formerly of | William Daley north thirty-six degTees west fty- {io ruds io 4 Dost, thence along ands of Nancy i as north seven ree degrees ghty-six perches to place of Benin, containing : TWENTY-THREE ACRES, EIGHT PERCHES about one-half above acreage covered with a vy set of white pine saw timber. Terms. —Ten per cent. of purchase money to be aid on day of sale, the balance to be paid when the sale is confirmed and deed delivered. S. KLINE WOODRING, JOHN J. BOWER. 56.28.3t Trustees. HARTER APPLICATION.—Noticeis hereby ven that an application will be made R. Spaide, R. B. Stauffer and ©, : » » g BELL & HARTSWICK, i Solicitors. Insurance. : EARLE C. TUTEN (Successor to D. W. Woodring.) Fire, Life and Automobile Insurance | None but Reliable Companies Represented. Surety Bonds of All Descriptions. Both Telephones 56-27.y BELLEFONTE, PA Bath Apparatus. Portable Bath Apparatus. I have the general agency for the well known Allen Portable Bath Apparatus. A postal card will bring me to your door with a free demonstration of these handy articles. LUTHER E. HUGHES, Gen'l Agt. 56-26-4t. Valentine St., Bellefonte, Pa. | i Niagara Fails. PENNSYLVANIA R. R. Personally-Conducted Excursions to Niagara Falls July 26, August 9, 30, September 13, 27, October 11, 1911, Round-Tri» §7 10 rem Bellefonte TRAIN of Pullman Parlor Sars, SPECIAL Dining Car, and Day Coaches running via Picturesque Susgnehanna Valley Route T to Niagara F Toronto, Thousand Islands, July 19, oF al and 16, 56-26-9t, New Advertisements. An, to wp New Advertisements. ts —— Fo Sanne ot gn. Jot of SCANS store foom of the Bea second-hand Hrussels carpet, nearly all persens o in- | hundred first served, to said estate to make payment and those ame ya Price 56-28-1t CL "oe 7 dime. | WANTED ANIL 10, Rp TABLE at The Pennsylvania State College. FO, asi aggerpowe on east How- Ply at once to A> 6273 BELL NE, No. 19311, 5626tf-eow. ———— A Good jar. OF. L PR IL FOSTER, Pa. ee — ele lea le alle Ee lB ll i. ln Blin lO ln Baldi de a The Economy Jar: No other Jar seals like it No other Jar opens like it No other Jar keeps like it No Rubber rings to leak or rot, or mold A Jar that will remain air-tight forever A Jar that is easy to seal A Jar that costs less in the end than any other A Jar that is easy to fill—easy to open, and easy to clean. The Potter-Hoy Hardware Co., 56-26 { { : Try It and You Will Use No Other. WNW TY WY TY we vy WYN WY WY wer The First National Bank. A large nu.nber of our depositors are women. They find a checking account is a great convenience. The deposits furnish a record of income while the checks serve as receipts for bills paid. The First National Bank, 56-46-1y Bellefonte, Penna. fe of Special x0-Day Excursions. TT i a Te ly Hr A, Bp iO ll A Bl ln NB li. Br. AO, } ATLANTIC CITY | CAPE MAY « Wildwood, Ocean City, Anglesea, Sea Isle City, Holly Beach, dd i Avalon, Stone Harbor, New Jersey THURSDAYS, August 3,17 : $6.00 Round Trip $5.75 Round Trip Via Delaware Bridge Via Market Street Wharf NTN WT TTT FROM BELLEFONTE TICKETS GOOD RETURNING WITHIN TEN DAYS STOP-OVER ALLOWED AT PHILADELPHIA For full information concerning leaving time of trains, COnBHIE STHall hand Dis OF Iearest Ticker AREIt. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD NU NN NN NT EN NW oh A, bi TE = oh i. oe A NG A —- ———————— N———— The Centre County Banking Company. Strength and Conservatism are the banking qualities demanded by careful depositors. With forty years of banking ex- perience we invite you to become a depositor, assuring you of every courtesy and attention. We pay 3 per cent interest on savings and cheerfully give you any information at our command concerning investments you may desire to make. The Centre County Banking Co. Bellefonte, Pa. 566 Rd