The Centre Reporter CENTRE HALL PA HUNTING WORK IN SUMMER. A graduate of the University oft Minnesota has asked the New York Post and the Chicago Tribune to air his reasons why commencement in June. He left school In June with such honors as Phil Beta Kappa dang son, 'l11, says he has found no work yet. He blisters scorching argument But this ployment. suppose and bad to trail the jobless route for the following six months, pot, along about the holidays, deplore a bleak world's unkind woridiiness? Would he mot prefer to be knee deep in summer, when, if he had to remain idle, he could at least retain a degree of physical comfort? The trouble with too many of these present-day graduates is that tney emerge from the dear old alma mater thinking destiny has a greater career carved out than is really in store for them; they are not willing to begin at the bottom, says the Indianapolis Star. Scholastic training is the greatest as- gtrikes out for himself, but with it he must have the determination to begin with little things if ne hopes ultimate- ly to reach greater things. A college degree is not always a passport to the presidency of a big industrial corpora- tion, though it is oftentimes a condi tion precedent. Following the store robbery and shooting of a policeman in Cleveland by a bey, inflamed by stories of Wild West life and highwaymen, a council man of that city has Introduced an ordinance prohibiting the sale of trashy and {immoral books to the youth. There should be such legisla tion in every city, says the Ohio State Journal. We spend mililons edu- céte a boy right; why not do thing to keep him from being educated wrong? ple from poisoning their bodies; why Dot a regulation to restrain them from poisoning thelr minds? To give a boy a book that will make a highwayman of him is a black offense that should not be permitted it is an attack on society that society should not tol erate. We are greatly excited upon the question what schoolbooks shall be furnished the chiidren. We should be a great deal more excited upon the question of keeping harmful books away from them. Ordinances are need ed for this purpose. There is a vast amount of bad citizenship made by bad books, and there are stacks of bad boys. to some- We have laws to prevent peo- It Is a base libel on the American hen to charge that she could lay about twice as many eggs as she does every year, and is therefore siothful. It is unbelievable that the American Poul try association is responsible for this reflection on her powers. The truth is, the hen's egg output is automatic, being regulated by the treatment her owners give her. On a proper diet, which includes shell-making material, she works with great diligence, ac cording to her breed. If she 18 expect ed tc pick up a lUving about the barn yard and to keep herself warm in ex pored winter quarters, her tally nat vrally suffers. The hen 1s a gold mine only when her owner co-operates with er. The new minister of war in France, M. Messimy, is growing unpopular with the French officers. Taking an filustrious American exemplar, he has issued an order that the examination for promotion to generalship shall in- clude severe physical tests, and an- other by which corps commanders are to report officers who are unfit to take the fleld. Any one who has seen an army review In Paris, say July 14, and observed the fat generals joiting like jelly in their saddles, will sym- pathize with M. Messimy's efforts. cret of keeping the temperature low. However, one can never convince an Englishman of this fact unless he also bas seen its demonstration abroad. An interesting sight in London is one of the great periodical sales of raw skins and furs held at a fur warehouse in the city. The magnitude of the trade and the vast amount of mohey Involved would surprise any one who visited one of these sales for the first time. At the premises in Great Queen street one can wander from floor to floor piled with thou sands upon thousands of skins until one begins to wonder where all the creatures they once clothed lived. JEERED 10 FLY Frank Miller, a Young Aviator, Meets His Doom. Psople on the Fair Grounds at Day- ton, O., See the Man Enveloped in Flames From the Blazing Gasoline Tank. Dayton, O Forced into the alr a coward, Frank H a Toledo (0.) aviator, shot into the sky at twilight Friday evening and at the height of 200 feet was burned to death before the eyes of the ter- rified spectators on the Miami Coun- ty Fair Grounds, at Troy, north of Miller had circled the racetrack and was just starting on a spiral glide into a neighboring cornfield when something went wrong He could be seen making a frantic at- tempt to get his machine under con- trol, when suddenly the whirring of the propellers ceased The then dropped like a shot for tance of 50 feet A tiny blue flame was emitting from the engine and in an Instant the gasoline tank exploded The machine was wrecked by the impact and debris was hurled hundreds of feet in all directions, what remained of the machine and its driver burn- ing almost to a crisp as they dropped rapidly to the earth It was Miller's second fii day and fifth week In a ter noon steadily up The afternoon make a flight and went be glad when th ed his m a Strobel bi ght of the " 1 Tr the and last of short flight shortly his machine acted and he did crowd not care eered him when he sald into the air to echs BITTER ON DR WILEY'S FOES Foliette Calin Dismissal all engaged in Case. Madison, torial In jotte’'s magazine demands the ters who sought Ww In part bh “The charge against pretext to get the vigilan chief chemist t the broadside Solicitor MeCabe mu Secretary Wi to retire But it perversion of and keep to his upbuilding sham to commend him to Falr dealing that all hig? removed from the position and trust which th pm ire n La for of Wis In a bit Issue Senator Ls the last retiremen to Wiley 1 - i COR publici ®t RO may of ison be force would be a sorry justice to Wickersham ¢ drop Wilson Wilson has credit the of agriculture not a single than epu vae py Years o has to the public plotters, hed RISE IN FOOD STUF¢S This Time It Is Bamed on Result in Canada Chicage Foodstuffs have affected by Canadian products had his government not been Canada Thursday, rose prices in all American supply Friday Wheat led the advance 3 was followed late in the day by fic when millers ignored previous price lists and adjusted their quota- tions figures more with the advanced cost etaple Oats, too, felt the Canadian vote and as BUmers may expect soon to pay in- creased prices for breakfast foods The initial meal of the day, in fact, seems destined to bear the brunt of iigher living costs within the next few months, as it needed to- day's developments in the trading pits to add force the recent ad vances in coffee and sugars The consumer's toast and biscuit cakes and porridge, it will but add to the woes been an Laurier defeated sharply their to commensurate of the grain effect a result con- of the only to of the Sherman Will Recover. San Jose, Cal.—Theé condition of the Rev, Thomas Ewing Sherman, of the Jesuits, who was committed to an insane asylum Wednesday af- ter an attempt at suicide, was re- ported Friday to be improving so that an early recovery is probable Dr. E. W. Mullen, of the Agnew State Hospital, where Father Sher man is confined, sald after passing several hours with him all that Was necessary was complete rest. Fifty Periah in Storm. Naples. ~<A hurricane of great violence and accompanied by a del. uge of rain raged throughout the Vesuvian reglon, causing a heavy loss of life and cnormous damage to property, It is estimated that 50 persons were killed. Houses were razed by the wind, while others were fnundated, Numerous boats in the Bay of Naples are missing and are belleved to have been sunk, It is Impossible as yet to estimate the total dan.age done by the storm. | | i Copyright 1011) BIGGEST OF TRUSTS YIELDS Bllllon-doliar Stee! Corporation Pianning to Dissoive-- Problem a Ditficuit One. New York It was reported here the earnest attention of the There is ground that is making a strenuous demands of HHon-dollar Trust." for Corporation effort to government, also the assertion the Bteg +} meet ne f the but reason of complexity of the situs headway h Chairm discuss Francis tion s ag vel $ declined an E affairs, and the corpora- f x uid 1 # would not at ee ¥ ’ y i that neg of the to make oat pra tically all original selves dispassionate (nvest!- inflated recent of earn- De- Labor of report of the ce and a value because upon I shares into new cone preciation, BROTHER KILLS BROTHER. Hoe is Used With Fatal Ef'ect In Fight on Farm, Md about five m Walston's Bwitch, village iles east Ralisbury, was the of a bloody conflict in a cornfield Ennis killed his brother, Eddie, in the presence their father, John Ennis The father and his had some words con ghares of corn Ennis became pute Eddie pocket ¢ { gfene in which Younger of Theodore gon Theodore cerning the and Eddie in dis- due each, involved the pulled his knife from his and lunged at his brother Theodore, cutting him and also ecut- ting father's clothing while he was attegnpting to separate the boys Theodore seized a hoe, and the two brothers went at each other fiercely, and after several gashes had been in- flicted by each Theodore the the sent of. his brother ried there by his mother and father. A KISSLESS HUSBAND. Judge Grants Mra. Mary Lyle Willis a Divorce. Kansas she Is entitled to a divorce, decided Judge Walter A. Powell, in the Cir- cult Court at Independence, Mo, In the case of Mrs. Mary ‘Lyle Willis against Archie C. Willis. “When I would attempt to fondle and kiss him he would call me silly and tell me to go away,” the woman testified. Judge Powell immediately granted her a decree. Woda TENNESSEE DEMOCRATS SPLIT A independents Open War By Plane ning General Primary Nashville, Tenn.—Political war was formally declared in Tennessee, when State committeemen of the Ir. dependent Democratic faction ap- pointed a sub-committee t0 make plans for a general primary, This action follows closely on the heels of the regular Democrats’ re- fusal to declare peace with the In< surgents for the Presidential cam- paign. . CANADA VOTES NO ON RECIPROCITY | Laurier Government Defeated by Canadians. Indications That the Opposition Will Have a Majority in Parliament. Laurier F.1teen Years Pramier. Af i t dMoutreal th Eovern- a ¥ od " 3 a ¥ aii sullereq an overwhe ing defeal in the Canadian d Thursday 3 veritable elections By a the Liberal majority of 48 was swept party majori- any political landslide away and the Conservatl secured one of the heavw ve ent upward of 50, that party has inigters fies, Cana~ § RBeven § £ fsa dian ever h served MOLE cabinet who had with Premier defeated Lib« practically Dominton wm lL.aurier were the candidates rals every The ground in f the thelr the their majorities Ontario, the leading province of Canada, declared unanimously against the ad- ministration and reciprocity Robert l.. Borden, leader of the Conservative party, will shortly be- come the prime minister of Canada He will be supported Parliament by a working majority of members far more than ample for his pur. poses The government that the lost province o Where they emall won majorities Where Conservatives were won were tremendous almost in defeat means Congress in extra session, will not be introduced the Twelfth llament assembles next when mercial relations, will not be gible in the immediate future. Conservatives are committed to a United States. Although re-elected In two constit- { has directed the destinies of | Dominion. $ Editor Ehoots Jeweler. {in a badly bruised condition, and | Jake Ramser, a jeweler, has a severe bullet wound in his hand as a result { of trouble between the two. Rameer, | it is claimed, resented things Looney sald about him in his paper, and the two had a quarrel in a barber shop. Rameer was shot through the hand. I a Entombed Miners Saved Leadville, Col, Sept. 19 .--The three miners, Fred Caski, Deal Perle and Nat Jacobson, imprisoned in the Morning Star mine on Carbonate Hill for sixty hours by a cave-in, were brought to the surface last night. Odd Fellows to Meet In Winnipeg. Indianapolis, Ind. — Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, was selected as the next meeting place of the Bov- ereign Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows, in session here. fo ———————r orado Eprings--Heads Emashed Wi h Ax. Colorado Springs, Col.—Butchéred in their beds by some person ag yet unknown, who used an axe, the bodies of six persons, three in each of neighboring houses, were found here The heads of all been smashed in and the appearance of the bodies that days, an | while they slept A report { has been caught and { but this is denied by | feaned, lice officials, who, two Wednesday. the victims had indicated | several Gead came been death had that they d that the murderer that he has con- the po- it is intimated, fear guch an an- had been Wayne, one Evans, a was found blood BAYS ia lynching might follow An axe which { loaned Mrs. Henry F | of vietims, by J. R neighbor, last week, {stained by Mrs. Evans on Monday near the back of the Wayne ! home. No attention was paid to this was thought the used in killing chick- | nouncement io the door | fact, however, as it axe had been lens The Mrs {A J dead Alice Burnham, Burnham, cook at Woodmen Sanitarium Alice, and John, three two children consumptive, at the Wood- May wife of the Modern aged six, aged their Wayne, a VeRrs, Henry F until recently 4 patient um men Sanitar} Mrs. Wayne baby girl The Burnham house is situated and Harrison and her one-year-old at Place, and next y it on Dale t rectly in the » and close to Dale street the two houses gireet are vacan we 3 wavne n rear is the lies was called at gelling any trong odor, bodies of her their nd in ; ) covered with blood street ively a "ne the Wayne sre had been no signs and the same 3 ir § unday tiresen toc A presen €q of Mr. and Mis = 1 Te all horribly af 13 3 ica £ the bodies me had a of been a thickly settled neighbor com- and left unrevealed for three red 618 regarded as in fat nei OLpri t is 10 be when at different boring grocers TILLMAN TO RUN AGAIN. Arnounces His Intention te Succeed Himse £ Columbia, 8. C Sena Be nj he B Was was recent run Tiliman's announcement a candidate to succeed self, nade public here, glories 1h: again b BENJAMIN R. TILLMAN. U. 8. Senator from ©. Senator Tillman probably will be opposed by former Congressman W. Jd. Tabert, of this city. While Senator Tillman was town he purchased two pitchforks for agricultural purposes ried them to his home in Trenton. 8h Caeniing New Kind of Incubator Willows, Cal.—A fireless cooker rescue of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Pieper in sustaining life in their twin chil- dren, born a day or two ago. in separate compartments of kitchen appliance, the boy, weighed but two pounds at his birth, sleeping thelr way to health when not receiving food by aid of a medi cine dropper. To March 500 Miles. Junction City, Kan.—To test the new cavalry equipments recommend- ed by the Army Cavalry Equipment Board, Troops | and K, Thirteenth Cavalry, stationed at Fort Riley, have been designated for a practice march of 600 miles. Col. Edward J. Me Clernand, president of the board, will command. The route of march, probably starting tomorrow, will be from Fort Riley to 8t. Joseph, Mo. and will require 24 days to complete. ENDS IN DEATH Fast Train Dashes Into Party of Merrymakers. SIX BODIES ON ENGINE PILOT One Victim Huried Over a Barn Fifty Feot From the Railroad Track-- Thirteen Ki led, three Others Wil Die. Neenah, Persons dying Wie., Bept. 24 are dead, three others and {five are seriously the result of a fast train or CARO Northwestern early ana into 31 Sun day a hay merr) celebration rack, on were retu A bi the railway tracks obscured the makers beside View from the locomotive, as well ag from the tributory ca Nine without a Dust and {oF we » Wagon Just and IO were con is¢8 to the (tragedy members of the party escaped a scratch Nobody suffered train ImMoOmentary severe occurred at mercial street 199 No. 121, through the wagonioad and happy ing where people, Pete ne from the they had gc celebration of a weddin All but were Art covered two, who were Chi of Mena nd head residents legless o the right Che | [RE af RECIPROCITY SHELVED A WHILE Bileve Nest it Unde wood Doesn't Session Wilt Consider han Ala Birming lieve anytl iE Wii next Congress over t} Canadian man and recs i nderwood Means Comn al 4 iisposit FRANCE SENDS SECOND REPLY Two Nations Not Far Apart on Moroccan Question Frenct proposais urday by President received the Cabin Was messenger A semi unication that the slight divergence from the text of the Ger- man the Changes are pressed tween and M dispatched to official comm RAYE reply shows some note, adds that ingpired by the general views ex- at last Herr von Kiderlein-W Cambon but the conversation be- aechler Boy Scouts Condemned, Battie Creek, Mich The Michi- gan State Federation of Labor in an- nual convention here adopted a reso- jution condemning the Boy Scouls, whether they be called by that name or Minute Men, Children of the Re- public, or anything else. The reso- lution placed the federation on rec- ord as opposed to “war and all its | trappings, and especially the Boy Seout movement, and, further, that the local unions affiliated with the State Federation of Labor to be re- | quested to begin an active campaign to counteract the evil influences of this insidious movement.’ His Testimony Was Satisfactory, Indianapoiis, Ind.— Testimony of Mis, former president fea, given before a upecial committee the last election for president of the organization, was “entirely satisfac- tory.” according to Charles Baker, of committee. It was announced that the committee soon would make a re- port of the findings to the National Executive Board. To Succeed Senator Frye Portiand, Maine —Obediah Gard- ner, of Rockland, was appointed United Btates Senator to succeed the Jate William P. Frye. Mr. Gardner was the Democratic candidate for Governor of Maine In 1806, and an aspirant to the Senatorship before the Legislature at its session in Jan- pary, when Charles F. Johnson won the honor. Governor Plaisted ap pointed Mr. Gardner assessor for the State for six years, and he has been engaged in that office since April,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers