———— Centre Hall, - - Pa. —— ANOMALY OF PROFILES. How often have we sat directly op- posite a comely face In the street car, for instance, admiring its regular, well-formed features, when, with a certain turn of the person's head, the {Illusion of beauty suddenly vanished, the new view presented revealing con- tours of nose, chin and mouth disap- pointing in the extreme, says the Photo Era. The consoling feature, abnormally in so many cases, now as- sumes an air of repose. Few faces will produce a profile of classic beauty, and even some of these fall to yield Sattering full face portraits. This is pne reason that one sees more front view portraits than profiles in paint- Ing and photography. Incidentally, it may be remarked that many a man would look better with his head pre vented in profile, if he wore a mus- tache instead of being smooth-shaven. Not only does it preserve the har monlous proportions designed by na- ture, but its removal, in obedience to fashion's decree, sometimes result in unpleasant disclosures, such as an ab- normally long upper lip or an {ll shaped mouth, besides imparting un- due prominence to the nose. A pos- gibly humorous phase of this subject is the report that patrons of marriage bureaus in large German cities now insist upon both fullface and profile photographs of their prospective con- sorts. Judge Foster's characterization of “joy riding” as “thieving,” coupled with his imposition upon the prisoner before him of a sentence of a year in the penitentiary, gives the new law increasing the severity of the penalty for the offense an excellent start, says the New York Post. Such an attitude will not only serve as an emphatic warning to reckless chauffeurs, but will make it difficult for judges who might be inclined to undue leniency to yield to their weakness. It is a com- monplace that, in rendering law ef- fective, an ounce of enforcement is worth a pound of additional legisla- tion. Two British assistant army phy sicians committed suicide in London and the inquest resulted In the at- tribution of their self-murder to In. sanity caused by overwork. It was a pad end, yet precautions to avoid such a melancholy fate may be exaggerated. Everyone who stops to reflect upon the subject probably will be able to recall the names of more than one among the persons of his Immediate acquaintance who never will die of overwork. Save the babies. So many people are getting lynched and killed in au tomobile and motor cycle races, not to mention the fatalities in aeroplane and warship disasters, that the little ones are sure to be needed. The charge is that all the microbes not otherwise disposed of, amounting to several billions if not more, attach themselves to the public roller towel The appearance of the towel, too, strongly corrobrates the charge. “What are you going to do with your boy in summer?” asks a corre spondent. For the correct answer many a parent will have to inquire of the boy. One hundred guests fled from a Cin which must have been embarrassing to those who travel without night clothes. New York is going to try vacuum street cleaning. This we submit is in- Cr —————— C—O BRI PERJURY INTHE LORIMER CASE Intimation That Prosecution | May Follow. ‘LORIMER PUT UP TO TAFT. Eaward Hines, the Chicago Lumber- man, Alleged to Mave Cullect- ed the $100,000 8 ush Fund, on ths S and. Washington. Intimation that of the election of was ste Investigation Benator Lorimer { Thursday during the examination of Edward Hines, the Chicago {aire lumber man, whose connected with the alleged fund collected to elect Mr { Mr. Hines flatly contradicted many statements of previous witnesses, and the situation aroused Kenyon, of lowa “Now there ought to prosecutions for perjury right he exclaimed He did not whom he would have his remark created a pression Mr. Hines’ first testimony that tracted deep interest was his detall- ed account of how he said President Taft, former Senator Aldrich and Senator Penrose had him exert his influence to have Mr. Lorimer elected to the Senate. Mr. Hines then detailed in tirety the testimony of Clarence Funk, general manager of the ternational Harvester Company, garding the conversation the men had at the Unlon League Club, in Chicago, shortly after Mr. Lori mer's election Mr. Funk had testl- filed that Mr. Hines asked him on that occasion for a $10,000 contri- bution to a $100,000 Lorimer cam- paign fund Mr. Hines testified that Mr. Funk asked for an introduction to the new senator, and for the privi- lege of contributing to his election expenses Mr. Hines added that when he mentioned the proposed introduction Mr. Lorimer objected, because he re- garded Mr. Funk as one of his active enemies. When the Senator explain. ed to Mr. Hines that he had no elec tion expenses to defray, Mr. Hines said he decided not to mention Mr Funk's offer Subsequently, he said, expressed disappointment outcome of his conversation Hines, but continued very even asking Mr. Hines to get seat in the Senate galiery here last 4th of March, and to introduce Mrs, Funk to Mrs, Hines occasion last spring Mr. Hines also contradicted the testimony given by Wirt H of Duluth, Minn During the day Mr. Hines put inte the record copies of all the telegrams which had been sent to him by Sen- ator Lorimer since the latter's elec- tion, with the exception of one, which he declared he never received He told the committee that all his per- sonal checks and those of the com- panies with which he was connected were open to its inspection It was announced at House that the President discuss Mr. Hines' reiterated nent that Chief Executive pressed any preference for Mr. Lori mer for senator name $ 1 ou. 060 Lorimer be some here,’ indicted, profound im at- its en- 5 re two Funk the Mr over with Mr, cordial, him a on one in tote Cook, the White would not state. the ex. BANKER MUST SERVE TERM Morse Loses Another Fight for Re- lease From Jail Atlanta, Ga. Charles W the New York banker, serving a term in the Federal prison here for Morse, them. Some people seem to wait patiently from one June to another for the pur- pose of making a plea for shirtwaists for postmen and sunbonnets horses. in New York city are rated in a Rus sell Bage foundation report as demor alizing. It is apparent, therefore, that the Investigators attended the shows A school of music has been opened in Bangkok, Blam, and the Bangko kese are sald to be bidding for a sym. phony orchestra. They are highly musical. There is a Chicago woman who wants to get rid of a husband whom she won on a bet. The moral is: Never bet. A new gun for the battleship Texas will hit the enemy 12 miles away, pro vided the enemy will be accommodat: ing enough not to dodge. The death of a Chicago man is at tributed to the fact that he wore tight shoes. Yet Chicago women thrive and grow fat op such © orp of tortusa, failed in his effort to obtain his re- lease on a writ of habeas corpus Without passing upon the validity of that portion of Morse’s sentence of 15 years beyond 10 years, District the petition sentence unquestionably was out that time the court had no right now to enter further in the matter. Morse's attorneys filled notice of an appeal to the United States Cir- circuit, Judge Newman sald that he had no doubt of the legality of Morse's confinemen! In although it had been erected “hard labor” convicts. He Morse might be able to obtain a transfer to another prison by appli- cation to the attorney general, but he believed conditions here were probably as good, at least, as would be found In a prison elsewhere. Moros Kill Four Americans. Manila. Four Americans have been murdered by Moros in Mind- anao, one of the largest of the Philippine Islands, Prospectors named Oyler and Vexesboses were murdered near Camp Overton. A plantation owner named McGill was killed by robbers at Pantar. Private Michaelis, of the Twenty-first In- fantry, was killed at Parang. He was stabbed seven times in sight of his comrades. ¥ STi HOHE ie Vy # 51) CUNNINGHAM COAL CLAIMS | - Coal Lends Case De-| { cided lllegal-~Miilions Famous invoived The Cunning cialis famous land been Washington ham Alaskan coal through which it has that the Morgan-Guggenhelm had planned to extend their vast | alleged gynd ate interests in Alaska and to control ons of the most valuable coal fields world, were finally di Department of the Interior Secretary of the Interior Walter L Fisher, having approved the decision, down Fred Dennett, of Land Office, the have been in the gnllowed Ly Lhe depart ment’s as handed commissioner inst door closed the C ham claimants. Their attorneys threatened an appeal to the United States Supreme Court, but such an ap peal can be based only on some point of involved and not find ings of fact as angounced by the de partment The Cunningham claims in the public eye constantly for more than two years. They brought about Ballinger-Pinchot Investigation by Congress and the dismissal from the public service of Chief Forester Gif ford Pinchot, Louis R. Galvin, a chief of fleld division in the land office, and by | the believed 4 in to to inning. have law on the been have the WALTER FISHER, . fae my several minor officials loth Messrs Pinchot and Glavis were dismissed for insubordination incident their tacks on former Secretary Ballinger, whom they claimed was favorably. dis posed toward the claims in announcing the deciston of the department, Secretary Fisher. who succeeded Mr. Ballinger in March last, declared that new coal land laws are needed in Alaska if that territory is to be developed properly. In a statement the Secretary sald: “This is a final decision of the Cun ningham claims so far as the Depart. ment of the Interior is concerned {Any further proceedings will be mere. ly formal for. the purpose of perfect ing the record in case the claimants think there are questions of law which they desire to present to the courts It is my understanding that it is con. . ceded that the findings upon the facts | by the department are conclusive. “It is the intention of the depart. {ment to proceed at once to a final de [termination of all the remaining : claime so far as this to at- | Alaskan coal [ean properly be done, denying those [that should be denied and granting {those that should be granted as rapid. ly as possible” Anroniane fo Every Post i Washington. — Every army post in | | the country will be supplied sith an | , aeroplane, which will be sghirned as | (soon as completed. Men from the | new army training school at College | Park, Md., will be detailed to operate | there, Treaty Agreed Upon. Washington. After a conference between President Taft and Ambas- sador Bryce, of Great Britain. an- nouncement was made at the White House that the arbitration treaty be. tween the United States and Great Britain was practically complete and | with the exception of a few com. paratively unimportant details the terms of the treaty -had been agreed upon. . SHE Hing SERRE hy th igi t Lr fin NRE TRUSTNOW ON THE GRIDIRON poration Indicted. Thirty-Five Companies, Seven P.oing Associati_ns, dic ed on Forming in. Char es Preferred «y Fuderal Government. Eighty-fo York utacturers, repress ning #, Were ir grand jury they had ur wire ax we COIN~- Danie fit edd ¢ panie dicted here he on the by ground against the in baving Federal offended Anti-Trust Law pociing were alleged have restraint of The and Wire ( ompany, largest subsidiary concerns United States Steel Cor that Sherman formed which Line Associations acted in American to trade Steel one of of oration, the the was declared to have been represented in seven of the pooling associations and its president, Willlam P. Palmer. was indicted seven times The name of John A. Roebling's Sons Company appears in eight Indictments On the ling also are the General Elec tric Company, the National and Cable Company, the Standard Underground Cable Company, the American Horse Shoe Company and the Hazard Manufacturing Company In the list of def the names of Erskine Hewitt Abram B. Hewitt the embassy Conduit endants appear son of and of $end to lon Queen Victoria's jubilee Satteriee, son-in-law of J who gets in because he of the Habirshaw Wire Company: Charles F. Brooker, vice-president of the Aasonia Brass and Copper Com- pany and Republican mitteeman from and Ferdinand Roebling: Perot, ret Ary for L. Morgan, president sent don Herbert Pp is national com- Connecticut; Carl Edward 8 who is president of the Nation- al Conduit and Cable Company: Frank J. Gould, on the score of his being president of the Old Dominion iron and Nall Works: LeBaron C Colt, of Rhode Island, and EE. FE Jackson, Jr., a lawver of this city Jackson was indicted nine times on ground that h 81 por. vigor of all nine pools Ferdinand Roebling was named eight times and Joseph W. Marsh, president of the Standard Underground Cable Com- pany, was indicted six times. Sales- men and minor officers of the vari companies were indicted many times also The indictments cover the whole field of the wire industry, including electrical cables, steel and copper wire, wire nails and horseshoes. The rovernment alleges that the “ine as- soclations controlled from 70 to 95 per cent. of the business in their respective departments. the e Was ous Cold Starvae Enos Mateh, Springfield, Mass. A West spring- fleld man placed a plump hen on a setting of a dozen cold storage eges The twenty-first day, eight chicks hatched out. There are six varieties of fowl, a circumstance which the proud mother hen affects not to ln ——— Admir+i Togo ts Arrive August 4 Washington — Admiral Togo, the Navy Department announced, will ar- rive in New York on the Lusitania August 4. He will spend 17 days in this country, and will visit Boston, Philadelphia, Washington, Buffalo and Niagara Falls, Drowned in a Barrel Fairmont, W. Va--Mrs. A. FP. Radtka, of Barnesville, a suburb of this city, aged 63 years, took her life by drowning herself in a barrel of rainwater at the home of her son-in- law, C. W. Yates, with whom she resided. B8he left the house but a short time before her lifeless body was found. Mrs. Radtka's mind became un- Juries sustained by her son, Edward, in a fall of coal in a mine of the Consolidation Coal Company. Snowed Under in New Jersey By the Voters, “LET TRENTON TRY IT FIRST" Ad ption Opposed By Democratic end Repub ican O'ganiza- tions ana Al Cfiice Holders ne % Hoboken, large that it Eovernment The total vote polled, J Hoboken majority Hot decided Tues- 5 i by {day a Of YoLes Aoes Want comm sion dis- wth one <9 -y trict of 200 votes missing, was 7,62 of which commission government re- ceived 2,766, giving opponents a { majority 2,080 Under the Walsh act it was necessary for the commission government advocates to poli 2,836, per total vote members of elec ils ¥ Gl ir ! or ou cent cast for tion last fall, which they failed to do The campaign for Walsh FOr a week every the adoption of the acl was a Vigorous one LHiags- eet iLES were night, and one of then addressed by Cominission Governor Wilson govern Halted much ment advocates algo cire literature throughout the ity The adoption posed by publican d Fire office-holder i 100 Ke ’ ¥ $ is aiore Litterly ¥¢ t of the act was op- and He Police Demorvratic the organizations, the Departments ihe 0 see th an every in ludicrous t BHIRARONILL IC tions working ha for a con The oppor I't Pi together non cause ents to form of governn t i not hold any ¥ “0 Lic late literature, game which the any they result neetings or cire but SAriv it the began ill hunt proved a wt shows, very effective 600 Short at Brunswick New Brunswick, N. J By a of 2to 1 government was 2 defeated Youle Commission here at the special election being 2,620 majority the total against, 245 ing 1,245 Even for it, there cast to bring up to the required 20 per cent the Valsh act Last registry was €.000, and 1 were necessary be nr commission government carry it The vote polled fell nearly 600 short of that figure Not a single one of the pix wards gave a majority for it said, Let Trenton try while others sald the election d too and unity the Yole for, the against be though the majority had not Vole enough for it under been were votes the Year the ROO voles fo 1 » io 10 ya 1 led in the city Many it first,” had been call not had acquainted they be «© sO0OnNn had to = "T 1 an opport come with subject sufficiently to vote intelligently thereon REAPPORTINOMENT PASSED Bill Adopted by Senate Without Amendment The Com- report Reapportionment » Washington Senate mittee Census the Congressional Bill without amendment providing for 433 representatives, notwith- standing practically all the commit- tee members had expressed them- selves as opposed to the increased representation The bill provides for 42 represen- tatives over the present number and was framed so as to prevent a crease of the membership from any state. Three of the 10 members present, Senators La Follette, Du- Pont and McLean, voted in the nega- tive, but while expressing disapproval of the increase the other seven de- cided to allow the House to have its way in the matter so peculiarly per- taining to its own affairs. The re- port will be withheld for a week to Rive Mr. La Follette time to prepare a minority report, which will be pre- sented by Senator Baflley on agreed to de- ——————— AA SOLDIERS KILLED BY BOwVSB ing ‘0 Band. Mexico City — Seventy-two Mader- let soldiers were killed in the town of Jonacatepec, State of Morelos, on Monday by the explosion of a mine planted by federals before the evacu- ation of the place, according to dis- patches received here The dead belonged to General Za- | pata’s band. They had been muster- ed out and were on their way home. They had stopped in the plaza to listen to the band, when the explosion took place. The remainder of the | Maderist detachment, 1,000 in num- making an investigation. om FIRE CHIEF K LLED Disappears During Explosion in On Plant Afirs, Portland, Ore. «- Chief David (Campbell, of the Portland fire de- | partment, was Instantly killed and three firemen received serious in juries in a blaze at the plant of the oil company on the East Side. Campbell had led a small sauad of firemen into the blazing warehouse, a ’ SPURNS Willi Not Des:rt ples for Pensior~-So- cial Evie. Pastor Pringle Philadelphia.—* No rich man has the ' right to ask us to desert our principles : for the sake of an old-age pension,” | declared the Rev. Mr. E. M. Poteat, | president of Furman University, at { Greenville, 8. C., at the session of the Baptist World Alliance. The vast dience applauded the sentiment ex- i pressed. The Rev, Mr. Poteat said his | criticism was directed against Andrew Carnegle, because of the provisions at | tached to the retired f{ronmaster's teachers’ pension fund, excluding from participation in be fund colleges { Which impose any theological test “l deny the right of Mr Carnegie to impugn the competence in the field of education m or of any other sectarian institution.” the ¢ lergy- man sald. “1 know Mr. Carnegie per- sonally, and he $44, 000 to our college, but 1 deny his right ¥ ached au of y colleague had contributed to make such provisions as he att Lo the old-age pension fund.” A feel cial world-wide in ber the against dems 80 nina a8 campaign which other to evils, tions asked join v aunched at meeting A fs 1 "wit ‘ fal A special roma tee on social prog ’ Mac- ana ili be named !? President 141. . Alliance asked ¥ the Baptist ne will be to » confer and ge AR will ile of the concentrated stamp out the n world he res introduced by the Rey Des Moines, ian, } Bion ointment alize ori ie world to FARMER WH PP.D BY OWL Victim of B.ro's At ack Not Expect d to Live. Washington wealthy farmer, is miles west of here no " f hope for b re in suit of his encounte hoot ow] while walking through Cruzan, yard, was struck in the owl, which, apparently, had unin the m The bird, infuriated, fastened its i ruzan’s and began a Again d again the penetrated the man's beat off Lru- flight tentior collided with an talons in ( face vicious attack beak t (“r i I an heavy g efforts to eves uzan were ir an Finally the bird his face { the bird vain oy fal 4 14 £ an ie) unt sonscious still recking and clawing at Senator Lea in Mospital Luke the Senator Lea, trans- to save 10 Washington from effort returned Tennessee, weak biood in an life, has the remain few days re- He overtaxed resuming hi investigatin a iperating strength in imer and physicians Mrs. 1 BE Gulls the Lor tee ordere bed suffered a setback 2a also is said En'p Subsicy Bi'l Again Washington Humphrey, of introduced Representative Washington, has re- his bill looking to promotion of the American merchant marine in foreign It provides a subsidy plan for fast modern ships carry the malls, reases the tonnage taxes on foreign vessels and provides for free ships for foreign trade tha 1 e trade 10 in« Killed n First Aero Trin. Chalone Sur Marne, France Lieutenant Trochon was fatally in. jured while making his first trip as pilot of a biplane The machine plunged to the earth almost imme diately after rising, and the Lieuten- ant was taken from the wreckage terribly injured He was taken to a hospital where he died soon aft ward or. Seven-Story Leo to Dea'h, San Francisco Mise Florence R. Cushing, of Boston, who just arrived here from Honolulu, jumped from the seventh story of a hotel and was in- stantly killed. A note found in her bedroom sald troubles had made her desperate and asked that her broth. er, C. E. Cushing, of Needham, Mass., be notified. His Care Betravs Mim New York Hecause he refused ‘to permit his finger prints to be ‘taken, the record of Mike Ferguson, who wanted to enlist, was investigat. ed and he is now held as a suspect (in a train holdup in Kansas last March, Killed by a Piteh«d Bw Bridgeport, Conn.—John H. King, 17 years old, lies dead as a resalt of being hit on the temple by a pitehed ball during a game Sunday in which he was taking part. He dropped unconscious when hit and died several hours afterward with. out regaining his senses, Matches have not yet displaced the tinderbox in certain districts of when a heavy explosion occurred. Spain and Italy * ——————————
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers