(—— ne hm erates ni en The Centre Reporter Centre Hall, Pa. GROWING COUNTRIES. The cénsus department of Canada mstimates the present population of khe Dominion to be 7,350,000. The dis Eribution by sections fis: Maritime vinces, 1,087,112; Quebec, 3,088, rip Ontario, 2,619,025; Western prov- Inces, 1,871,164; unorganised terri Rories, 58,309. It is not surprising that Canada, with her many resources and her healthful climate and varied op portunities for industrial wealthseek- ars, should grow all the time, says the Mexican Herald. A sturdy race which Increases by the excess of births over Beaths is continually being reinforced by immigration, and that of the best ind. The consuming power of the population of Canada is very large, mnd accounts for the heavy importa. lent support given to home industries. creasing in wealth, It is interesting SECOND LARGEST + By the Census Returns. LONDON ONLY METROPOLIS AHEAD. Figures Given Out By Director Du- rand Show That Greater New York Has Increased Since 1900 By 1,329,- 681, or 38.7 Per Cent.—The Borough of Bronx Bhowed the Greatest In- crease, With 114.9 Per Cent. More Residents—Some Comparisons. Washington, D. C. (Special) —Greater New York has a population of 4,768,883, under the thirteenth decennial census, ac tbe Census Durand. This makes New York the second largest city in the world, and as large as any two foreign cities, excopting London. Since 1900 the population of the me tropolis has increased by 1,320681, or 38.7 per cent, as compared with 3,437 Rinues, just as it does in the casa of Cuba and Argentina. The ancient fberian motherland still bresds sturdy race which send its sons to Tormer colonies. It used to be “King Cotton.” Ppremacy. commerce. There has been an enor mous increase in the production of rubber and in {mportations into the ‘United States. This Is due to the rap- idly augmenting demand, with rubber ‘as an essential for automobile, bicycle and carriage tires and for other pur poses. Word comes from Sumatra, which has been the source of supply the planters are giving up the “weed” and are converting their estates (nto rubber farms. It {8 not believed, ber production. (3 mirship and the wireless still come into play. A wealthy sum- | mer resident of Newport who went In his automobile to visit another gentle man found himself with his touring car stuck in soft sand from which it could not be moved unaided. An obliging farmer of the neighborhood hitched up his ox team and drew the suachine out of the predicament into which the vehicle had plunged. Could | frony further go? Still, the auto is a good and useful and has come to stay, although occasionally, | in the case of a breakdown, it stays : too long in one place. invention A new compass which may super. sede the compass now in general use is under test on the scout cruiser | Birmingham. It is a combination of | the conventional compass with the gyroscope, and is sald to eliminate all varieties of deviation of the needle it can also be placed in the interior of a ship, where it is safe from the | missiles of an enemy. A compass of this kind would be extremely valuable | in naval service, but it would be far | more valuable to commerce, as the in fluences which affect the compass on modern steel ships are puzzling, and | sufficient In some instances to cause wrecks through deviations from proper courses. The census officials expect to add | the names of 60 cities in the United | States to the list of those having a | population of 25,000 or over which | was compiled in 1900. Perhaps there | will be even more than 60. The In | ted to the rise of the cities. getting enough money to pay her trying to divide the estate you live” theory. hobble skirt style of bathing suit. It is absolutely impossible for them to swign when hobbled, but they prob ably don’t mind that. if they wished to go inlo the water they would prob ably do so in thelr bathrooms. Now that we get the true story on ‘the life of the fly by the ald of the microscope we see that it merits noth ing else no little as kind treatment. Shirtwaists for men will not do. It has been decreed that men must wear coats. Old Grimes Is dead, but his soul Is marching on. New York will make policemen out of farmer boys and Kansas is going to find It still harder to harvest its crops. The borough of Bronx showed the great The borough of Bronx showed the increase in the greater city, Brooklyn, Richmond and Man hattan following next in figures for these boroughs, 1 the increases, are as follows Bronx, 430,980, an or 114.9 per cent. Queens, 284.041, 042. or 85.8 per o¢ Brooklyn, 1,634,351, an 467,769, or 40.1 per cent Richmond borough, 85.968, an incre of 18.948 or 28.3 per cent i 2.331.542, r 26 per cent. order gether with increase of 230.473, an increase of 131 IRCTeRRG § 88 Manhattan borou crease of 481,449, A Comparison. York ¢ 164,640 fewer peopl cambined 14 eit of more than 200,000, the population of which already has been announced. name ly: Pittsburg, St. Louis, Detroit, l Cincinnati, Newark, Mil ington, Indianapolis, Jersey Cit Provide , Nt. Paul egate population « ax 493] 53: ty of New York, prior to the act of consol 1808, had a 1515301, as an in- New mtains only ity of e thas 108 Wansee, ver. The aggr as con dation population compared 1800 of increase of 1021 126.8 for the greater Ihe ypulation of Ch was 16808575: Philade St. Louis, 575,238; Boston timore, 508 057 These were the six citi ‘nit & population ov 801, or per cent City. " of cago 1800 ia, 1.203.607; 560 802: Bal mly that had p in States e810 the t S500 06000, Third. the Census Bu London was 008] 1900 or Paris Is According to figu rean, the popuiation of (sreaater in 1801, at the officia int, 372. The patie todd plat is 7.420740 Paris in 1908, by an official a population of in 1909, in 1605 Yoni 19 & at for count, had Petersburg Berlis ¥ . i 2.740.300 2.040, 148, Wyo estim a 609 iH HOPE FOR MILLION. Tuberculosis Societies to Unite In Selling Seals for Letters. New York for ti seals for { Special) Hed 1610 were ann Arrangements we sale of Cross Christmas minced in a bul letin just issued by the National Associa for the Study and Prevent Tuberculosis and the American “A million for tuberculosis” be the slogan of the 1910 campa Two features of the sale ¢ unique and will bring considerable capi tal the fighters T he American National Red Cross is to issue the stamps as in former years, but thi organization will work in close eo with National Association Study and Prevention of eulosis, which body will ahare In the pro ceeds of the associations stamps has per cent. to 12% mean at tion m Cross ign i118 Vear are to tuberculosis a Opera for Tt boa i Boer tion the the snles, for been The charge to of local the use the national per cent, which will least 850,000 more for tube: States, The stamps are to be designated as “Red Cross Seals” this vear and are fo be placed on the backs of letters. The National Conference of Tuberculo sis Secretaries through its president John A. Kingsbury, of New York, has issued a letter calling upon all State sad local anti-tuberculosis associations to unite with the National Association ctilosis and the Red Cross Society, in the gale of Christmas seals It in expected that over 430 anti-tu Union will unite in the sale of Christ mas seals. Drinking But Removed. Milwaukee, Wis. (Special). ~The law against public drinking cups on railroad trains and at public fountains went into effect Wednesday, and in accordance with instructions the trainmen on all trains coming into Wisconsin from adjoining Btates carefully removed the drinking cups before reaching the State lise and kept them locked up until the train’ had passed beyond the line into another State. Drowned In Freezer. St. Louis (Special) ~Drowned in an fco-crenm freezer while neighbors were searching for him and while his mother was at work four miles away, the body of Tiasry -Kramree, two years old, was found in the rear of tha Destrehan Phar- macy. le had climbed wpon a box be side the freezsr and loaned over the ledge and lost his balance. It is believed the child was seeking the fragments of ioe remained, ; OVER-WATER FLIGHTS Cartiss Averages Speed of Forty- Five Miles An Hour. Announced Time Consumed In the Passage One Hour and Eighteen Minutes—Forty Thousand People Cheer as He Soars and Sweeps Out Over Lake-—Breeze and Rain Cause Him to Postpone His Return Flight, Cleveland (Special) —Glewn H, Cur tiss, of Hammondsport, N. Y., establish ed a new record for over-water flights by traveling dver Lake Erie from Euclid Beach, nine miles east of this city, to Cedar Point, Olio, approximately 60 miles distant, The time of passage was 1 hour and 18 minutes. His average time was 45 miles an hour, although one stretch of 20 miles was covered at a rate of a mile a minute. Curtiss used the eight evlinder B50 horsepower biplane of his own construe. - o'clock when the had been from and It was shortly after 12 was taken from At 1.03 P. M., after it ascertained that the 12-mile the northeast prevailed in Cleveland Cedar Point alike, the At 1086 P. M., ped pie point Rero breeze was started f 40.000! motor wit A Cheers O who had gathered starting | ringing in over the atl the ears, the aviator Ht it } pt out SS weer WILL PUT IT UP 10 COL. ROOSEVELT The Miners to Submit Their Troubles to Him. LITIGATION VIEWED WITH ANXIETY. When the Colonel Visits Pittsburg on September 10 the Legal and In- dustrial Entanglements of the Min- ers and Operators In the Irwin- Westmoreland Fields Will Be Placed Before Him, Pittsburg (Special) ~The of Irwin legal and the and industrial miners West submitted entanglement operators in the moreland flelds will Theodore Roosevelt city on September 10. This nounced by District President Franci Feehan, of the United Mingworkers o America, after he had been arrested with five other loeal officers, in connection with and be 10 this Was an when he visits the actions brought in the county courts against 87 miners and offic by operating companies in the affected dis- ricts Feehan further velt or Rate the ft Irwin fie als REVET said that visited the anthracite more he was in Lh at gmey ago reques suble and ti 14d wi ¢ of 200 feet th tu west At it had eland re 104 OM al ng the and t mist m extremity er front 1.286 P. M., Euclid Beach, vd off Dover Bay 1.46 it passed d directly iree the tw UKs Loraine, Vermillion at Cedar Point it glided onto the Breakers Hotel 10,000 persons gathered on | land the aviator, | and carried lers to his hotel over beact 1 went wild when Curtiss hrong rushed down on from on {ts shoul lifted him the machine him Had the aviator been able to maint the speed at started all however, | which he out would have broken i West of Dover i he encountered air currents that materifl. | i his Progress probably records ay, fed impeded FALL FROM TREE FATAL. Injured. He others we arms and Prisoner Removed to the Hospital Ward of the Jail Dr, H ointly accused with Ethel Clara Lon fon Special) Hawley ppen, j he murder of his wife, has re Solicitor Newton that his elient | has given him an explanation of the fare well message found among the prisoner's | eWorta Inspector Dew, which will throw a different light the matter | when it ade public. The message | read in court at the arraignment of fave by y on is was the steamer | : that the writer contemplated suicide dur to Canada on Montrose, : i TORNADO KILLS TWO. dations and Wrecked. Heaton, N, D. (Special) .—H. 0. Thor wrecked this seriously hurt which nearly Hubert was town and [he property loss will exceed §100,000 | Smith Center, Kan. (Special) A | tornado, necompanied by a terrific hail laid waste an area a mile wide | 10 miles long north of here. | nado A. R foundations, outbuildings were wrecked | and trees were shore of their foliage and! So far as known no was injured, person i American Girl Killed, Munich, Bavaria (Special). ~~ Miss Rose Buckingham, of San Francisco, was killed and Mies Agnes Roos, of the same city, was severely injured by a runaway automobile as they were leaving the Prins Regentin Theatre. The driver had lost control of the ear as it approached the main entrance to the plavhouse, and swerving suddenly, it plunged into the crowd on the sidewalk, “Bumper” Crops. New Haven, Conn. (Special). Two “bumiper” crops are being harvested in Connectiont. The peach orchards will yield in the aggregate hall a million bushels of luscious fruit. One grower will ship 90000 bushels from his A statement ners A LAST CENT FOR POISON. Suicide Pawned Trousers to Carbolic Acid. Buy After } pur HITS SECRET SOCIETIES. Wells Condemns School College Fraternities. ins Amer Prof, and i pe the immoral he features Bey ference on moral and religious train § Prof. Amo: RB. Wells secrbtary of fil Dodirs Were res And a Yigorous condemnation were % t societies in high schools were of the session of the Sagamore ig ing of (he young of B {nite editorial for Christian Endeavor who denounced secret high schools, wim 1h Kowiety the WRN speaker soCiel jos in ENGINEERS GET INCREASE. Ann Arbor Men Also Get Shorter Working Hours, Toledo. OO, | Npecial Beginn ng t« day I engineers employed by the Ann Arbor 115, will al R re ailroad, numbering about reduc The new scale of wages, which is not was decided upon at a8 con ference at which the railroad was re pre sented by Mr. Holliday and K. A. Gober superintendent of the road at Owosso, Mich, and J. B. Hurst, A, Me Kerring and Frank Amos, who were pres ent for the engineers, ont. i REED STATUE UNVEILED. In Portland, Me, Portland, Me. (Speecial).—A bronge Representatives at Washington, was un- : veiled in his home city, on the western | promenade overlooking Caseo Bay. ! The statue is eight feet high and rep. | resents the former Speaker in an attitude : of repose with a seroll in his left hand, | The pedestal is of Maine granite, nine feet high. The statue is the work of Burr C. Miller, of New York and Paris, son of Warner Miller. who was an ntimate friend of Mr. Reed, The cost was about 835,000, Fortune In Blast Portland, Me. (Special) Forest L. Heavy, of Lewiston, will net, it is said, from $50,000 to $060,000 from a single blast of dynamite that uncovered the greatest find of tourmalines ever un. earthed in this Btate. In one pocket alone no loss than 0,000 carats of the gems was taken out. Already the farm. are digging in all directions, hoping to COTONS BIG ADVANCE Failure to Cover Until Last Moment is Costly. The High Price Is Looked Upon as the Culminating Point of the Bull Movement Which Has Been in Progress for the Last 8ix Months. No Attempt to Figure the Profits of Bull Leaders Who Handled 800.. 000 Bales Valued at $65,000,000. i from speculative shorts who i poned covering until the last { in the hope that the increasing new ere movement in the Southwest might brea i the control of the bull leaders Ihis price, the highest reached by | ton for any delivery | and exceeding by { pound the highest famous bull vear of 10903.1004 now, had stood as a omparison was regarded bn of had post the Civil 214 since nearly ees figure reached until standare Himinating point in progress here f{« REASON which, SUICIDE ON INCREASE, However, On Decline Washington, Dt Homicide, Spree oY L Cand 4 vear ending 18 murders the total Groner Year which was the flseal year of 1908 suicides pposed to 91 for just ended automobile Hetween secydents, dental poisoning, wher cas to murder and suicide the work which notlioe t called. the of that ereased exactly 100 per cent OPIUM INVADES ARMY. Using Drug. Ran Francis enemy fae nvaded the troops the the the Opium, armies of ranks of stationed extent ih Wich are 2500 men. has been to erush out what is declared to be the greatest danger con fronting the enlisted men at the reserva tion. An app al has been made to thc { Special § neidious of has Kiates arid, United the at Presidio «frong campaign, volved more than launched in an effort to such that an in slopes Last January company commanders be gan to make reporis to post head quarters, and the general hos a stricken soldier. that 40 per of I the in esl) oent New Director of Mint. Chicago (Special George E. Rob erts, of Chicago, announced that be has He will go to Washington this week and his fam. ily will soon follow. Senator Root On Way Home. ~ Southampton, England (Special). Senator Elihu Root, who headed the counsel in the New Foundland fisheries dispute before The Hague arbitration tribunal, and Mre. Root, sailed for New York Wednesday on the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, $ Thirty Lives In Danger. Pittsburg, Pa. (Special) ~~Wood aleo hol mixed with beer and whiskey at a foreign christening almost snuffed out 30 lives while one was being conseeratd, at Bast Pittsburg. As a result John Wodoosy, Ste Veroski, Wassil Bavo. En re I ud So Son bn goog hg Jind where : inters ha was ju he drinkables by some of the iy ng locate other pockets that may contain who were almost A MILLOVARE KILLS HINSELF IN HOTEL Samuel J, Hirsh ( ats His Throat With a Razor. HE WAS FOUND IN THE BATH TUR. Wealthy Clothing Manufacturer of Chicago Writes Several Messages Before He Takes His Life—Blood Dripped On the Paper as He Wrote—He Had Returned From Abroad a Week Ago—Man Was In Ill Health, J. ckwire, Samuel Wi ¥ | Hirsh, of jelothing manufaet at the corner of iren streets, | Cago, the sitting his by a RE WY Fag ‘ blood rash on could nd was committed » in his room at Eu. yYery New MAN TURNING TO BONE. Supposed to Be After Effects of Hook- worm. M. L coun ficatiom i for Peaden's due ch be pro- tment irden » and hands, Pi ARE as rheumatism Ti niinued wv that he could not move about mueh CC Walton, } ng the with electricity, says the i somewh the the § «tiffered nounced cnr ~ix month ing of the } feet, lin ysicians diagnosed the nardening who 1% {reat that was vieldin 10 at | treatment BANDIT IS DESPERATE. | Kills Man and Wounds Five Members of Posse. ~After kill at ile, named {Special 1 Phill and Cartersy; {va | ing man Beasley i { Gap, near this eity a wounding five | pursuers William Fowler, an aged white | man of this county, escaped to Lhe hills fand now heavily armed. Fowler is being pursued by a sheriffs posse and threats of lynching are being made, At the time Fowler killed Phillips he also shot and wounded James Byers and Sam Boston, A se surrounded Fowler in a house near Beasley Gap and demanded his sur render. Fowler came out, firing as he advanced, and Oapt J. W. Pierce. Hardy Goode and Sem Kilby fell wounded, the latter being d rously shot. Fowler then Fre. to the hills, Aim to Secure Bodies, Washington, D. C. (Special). ~A oor ferdam will be constructed about the wreek of the battleship Maine, in Havana harbor, according to preliminary adepted by the bourd of engineers in charge of raising the vessel. The neers decided that it was the intent Congress to regain the bodies of the dead and give them decent burial. The work in view. je at liberty 3 jv