The Centre Reporter CENTRE HALL PA ALLAYING A SCARE. It takes precious little, sometimes. to start a serious “scare.” The merest irresponsible rumor may result in a run on & bank, and a hint of fire may precipitate a disastrous panic in fact, It might be difficult to dis prove a statement, if made, that we mortals thoroughly enjoy being which this end mar be accomplished. ited Manchester Union The treasury de bundreds of inquiries from all sec tions of the country, on the strength with bas occasioned banks and business wen much inconvenience. As a mat ter of fact, there are 30,000,000 nick: els of 1910 in circulation, and, so far a8 the treasury department knows, all are genuine. Some of them were dis colored In the minting, by fumes of sulphuric acid, which gives them an unusual appearance. This fact may the “counterfeit” report, which is ft self bogus. The nickels are good for five cents each, and there is no oe casion for shying at them. His incorrigible activity in various parts of the globe has given the war god much to answer for during the last few months; but with gods as with men it can perhaps be said that there is some good in the worst of the species. In bekaif of Mars, for example, It may not be amiss to put forth the extenuating circumstance that his restlessness has at least added mightily to the geographical erudition of mortal men, says the Bos ton Herald Take Agadir, for In stance. Every one knows where it Is pow. But three months ago only a daring intellect would have vouched for its location on the Atlantic rather than upon the Mediterranean. Amoy, likewise, has been located for us, far to the south of Shanghai, where in our ignorance we least expected to find it. By the same token, we have been Introduced to millions of our liberty-loving friends in the provinces of Hunan, Hupeh and Hu-knows where else Increasing frequency of deaths by poison compels the conclugion that it would be better for the community if deadly drugs were less easily ob tained. Nearly every day's news car ries its story of murder or suicide by poison. In many cases the crimes are made possible by the sale of drugs that under no circumstances should be sold indiscriminately. - Evidence ia that the criminals purchased the death potion with the same ease and lack of restriction that would attend the sale of a bar of soap, saye the Chicago Journal More rigid regula tion of the sale of deadly poisons but It certainly would make them more difficult. At the least legis latures would do well to prohibit the sale of sudden death In the shape of cyanide of potassium, and other similar drugs, except to physicians and those who are known to have a legitl tate use for them. sane diplomacy call the histrionics #& year ago, the hysterical demand for a tariff war with Germany, the Im passioned denunciation of Germany a final settlement, factory to all concevned, cablegram from Berlin. feal Association warns against the use of thyroid as an obesity cure. It is dangerous because it reduces pro tein as well as fat, and has been known to bring on serlous {liness Most cases of undue weight are due to overeating, or lack of sufficient ex: ercise, or both. The safest treatment for obesity 1s abstefiiousness combin- ed with exercise—not ton violent, for that might injure the heart. Glad tidings from Washington. The bureau of engraving and printing will put on an extra force of workmen in “small bills We (lke the small bills ‘because they are so democratic. A wireless message lias beaten all records by going a distance of 4.000 miles. Modern magie has gained | MUCH SHIFTING IN NATIONALITY Our Alien Population is Grow- ing Fast. I FEWER FROM NORTH EUROPE ’ in Southern Europe and Russia On In. crease—Preliminary Re- port Issued. Washington.—A preliminary stage ment giving the distribution of the foreign-born white population of Con- tinental United States according to country of birth, as shown by the re turng of the census of 1910, been issued by Director Durand. The statement covers only the prin. eral, of 1810 upward of 100,000 persons were reported—and the figures for 1910 are given in round numbers, being subject to possible revision as the tabulations. All the statistics relate to white persons only, From 1821 to 1870 natives of Ger many, Great Britain, Ireland, Scandi- ed substantially ninetenths of all the | immigrants to this country, but since ber has steadily declined. 1880 to three-fourths for 1551-18%0, about two-fifths for 1881-1808, and only a little more than one-fifth 1801-1810 Immigrants from Italy and Russia, on the other hand, constituted less than 1 per cent. of all the immigrants from 1821 to 1876, but thereafter their proportion has stead fly increased-—from about onesix- teenth for 1871-1880 to one-sixth for 1581-1880, one-half for 1881-1900, and very nearly two-thirds for 1801.1810 At the census of 1510 out of an ap- proximate total for Continental Unit- ed States of 13.342.500 foreign-born whites, the persons born in Germany numbered 2.480.200 and constituted 18.7 per cent, as compared with 2. 813.413 in 1500, or 27.5 per cent. of the total at that census. This is a loss in the number of natives of Ger many during the decade of 314.213, or 11.2 per cent. At the census of 1910 there were re ported 1.351.400 persons born in Ire land, constituting 10.1 per cent. of the entire foreign-born white population, 232 persons so born, or 15.8 per cent. of the total, a the preceding census, a loss from 1800 to 1910 of 263.832, or 16.3 per cent During the decade 1500-1510 there Was an increase in the number of na tives of Great Britain from 1,166,862 to 1.221.400, or 4.7 per cent; an increase in the number of natives of Canada and Newfoundland from 1,172,746 to 1,198,000 or 2.2 per cent, and an in crease in the number of natives of Norway, Sweden and Denmark from 1,062,124 to 1,250,500, or 17.7 per cent Natives of each of these groups of countries, as well as of Germany and Ireland, constituted a considerably less total foreign-born white population in 1910 than in 1500 of the per cent. together were 58.4 per cent. total in 19810, as against 76.6 in 1806. BONUS to STEEL TRUST MEN, A Fund Of $1,450,000 Distributed Among Employes. New York.—The United States Steel tribution to employes under its bonus years. The amount this year is $1,450,000. The corporation also will offer to basis of the plan which has been in the the basis of 70 for the common and 114 for the preferred stock. CREW LASHED TO RIGGING. Men Are Saved. Block Island, R. 1.-—The four-masted schooner Mary Adelaide Randall, of Port Jefferson, N. Y., coalladen, was hurled upon the ledges west of Block Island by a terrific northwesterly gale, and four hours and a half later her crew of 10 men was rescued by the Block Island life-saving crew. The rescue was spectacular, and was accomplished only after the life savers had tried repeatedly to reach the stranded craft. The Randall was bound from Norfolk, Va, for New London, Conn. Union Depot, $40,000,000, Cineinnatl, Ohio, ~~ An ordinance granting a franchise to the Cincinnati Uniot Depot and Terminal Company to erect a new central railway depot here to cost $40,000,000, was passed by the city counell. The new depot 5 give the nine railroad and int terminus. It is expected that work 4nd that the entire yrofect / : } & x $i t a i ‘Diplomats Urge Their Claim to Concession, SLOW ACTING OF COURTS Quandary In Which the Government Finds Itself On Account Of its Arrangement With Canada Not Easily Disposed. Washington. — American and print paper manufacturers bring- ing pressure to bear upon President Taft to induce him to refuse to yield the demand of certgin European governments for the free admission of their pulp and print paper on terms of equality i the Canadian product The disposition of the administration has been to let this matter be deter mined by the courts but this in. voives long delay the diplomatic pro- testants are by no means satisfied and are adopting measures to show their resentiggent Cowl’ Von Bernstorff, the German Ambassador, has informed the State Department that Germany would not accord to American exporters the re duced duties om tool steel and hard rubber accorded to Swedish and Japanese exporters under their special treaties because America did not admit German pulp and print paper free of duty The Ambassador was re the German exporters fer by the delay {if just, because they had paid the duties into American Treasury under protest, which gives them the right to recover in case the Court of Customs Appeals she ide in their favor, as ls expected It was thought at first that this ex planation ufficient, but it now appears Ambassador's statement is virtually a renewed protest against the failure of the administration to ad- pulp are {io wit as wood minded that ne piel dec RRS 8 3 ie | ! i § § | Secrets Of the Barons Revealed By Attorney For Swift & Co. Called At Trial in Chicago—FPlans To Control Beef Industry. Detal is of the plan for a merger of the Armour, by Chicago $500,000 000 country, were revealed Tuesday in the trial of the 10 Chicago packers before United States District Judge A. Carpenter. The contract, which was dated May 31, 1502, was read to the jury and of- fered in evidenco by counsel for the government. The original agreement rt by Albert H Veeder, attorney for Swift & Co., who was called by the government ss its first witness, Attorney plans for the merger were abandon and that in March, 1803, Packing Co. was organized to operate certain packing com panies purchased with a view of In cluding them in the big company. Un der the terms of the agreement, the three large packing corporations and their subsidiary companies, together with recently acquired independent companies, were (0 be merged Into one concern. Armour, Swift and Morris were to receive bonds and preferred stock of the new company in payment for the value of their tangible prop erty in addition to this the promot ers were to receive $25.060.000 worth of the new company’s stock for in tangible property and a large block of common stock for their good wi i, thie amount to be fixed by the earn the different plants during the year of the new merger Packers Not in Secret. The promoters planned to borrow $50,000,000 to finance the corporation The appraised valuation of Armour, Swift, Morris and companies was given at $180,000,000 Each of the three promoters deposit in cou the ed National Yecder testified that the independent iE Of first of judicially In view the peculiar conditions under which Canadian pulp and paper got upon the free list, In spite of the failure of the reciprocity measure, some consideration is being given to the propriety of leaving to Congress the adjustment of the difficuliles that have arisen A NEW BEAR STORY. of osm With His Fists. Boulder, Colo. they hee an evidence of good faith, but were compelled to drop the plan cause of the failure of certain York capitalists to furnish the funds needed Previous to the calling of Veeder to prior to 1205 on the ground that the ers when they were indicted seven years ago should apply to that period. A WORD costs HER RICHES. Syracuse, N. Y., Smith claims to have a pair of brass knuckles and swung on the bear's jaw, knocking him out. Then he said he beat the bear about the head and spine until he was dead. A OAR AALS RAID POSTOFFICE SAFE. i —— Robbers Then Steal Team To Make Escape. Newcastle, Pa. Robbers drnamited the safe in the New Wilmington, Pa. postoffice, near here, and got away with $400 in money and stamps. Af ter robbing the postoffice they stole a team of horses from a farmer and made thelr escape. Later the horses were found grazing by the roadside. Countess Kidnapped, the Countess Cahen unoonecious in a ditch in the woods near Allerton. She was carried into a nearby house and when she recovered she related how she had been kid by & brigand with the object blackmail, The Word “Sisters” In His Will, Cincinnati. - Mrs. niece of former share in his $1,600,000 estate, accord. ing to a decision by Common Her share was lost to her because The document provided that property was to be distributed among the heirs of brothers, nephews and nieces, A Republic Or War. San Francisco~~The Chinese S8ix Companies, which is engaged in rais ing a two-miilion dollar loan for the Chinese revolutionary government, sent a cablegram to Wu Ting Fang at Shanghal asking him to resume hostili- tiem rather than vield to Yuan Shi Kai's demands for a limited monarchy. All Chinese in America, If states, are firm for a republic. A similar message wag sent to Tang Shao Yi who repre sents Premier Yuan at the conference, asking him also to use his influence in behalf of a republic. Maine's Fighting Mast. Pittsburgh, Pa-~The City Counef) adopted a resolution asking the Sec: retary of the Navy to send the fight. ing mast of the battleship Maine, in Havana harbor, to Pittsburgh to form a part of a monument to the late BL the time of the kidnapping, was RUSSIA'S TRADE WAR IN AMERICA AO Prohibitive Tariff Bill in the Duma. creased One Hundred Per Cent Is Aimed At American Agri cultural Machinery. St. betersburg A supplementary legislature proposal of a frankly prohib itive character was introduced by the Nationalists into the Duma. It is aim According to the terms of the pro the Jewish religion are to be i ond place customs duties to be raised by 100 per cent, Russian normal schedule ig lower than the American. In that case a duty equalling the American duty will be collected. The author of the the last provision is necessary in or der to deal with the import of Ameri can agricultural machinery. Ths remaining points posed bill correspond in virtually every particular with the bill intro duced on December 22 by ex-President Guchkoff for tariff schedules applic able to the United Btates at the ex- piration of the Russo-American com merce and navigation treaty of 1832 are the of Washington indicating the extent the action abrogating troduction Except as of Russian of the United States the treaty of 1832 the the Duma of the American ex with Russia la not regarded wit concern in o if the 13 the in in- bill trade § in ailacking the port ficial circles here. Ev should be would require measure Duma it the ap the Emperor himself to become law in that case it could not befolle January 1, 1913, because of continuance until that date present treaty, with its clause not be September a new treaty will seriously before In the will have been held and the great American quadrennial political con- ventions will have passed into history Removed from all likelihood of polita- cal Influence in either country, it is felt that the negotiations then can be conducted in a calm and judicial man ner WiLL PROVE J A TEST. the Reyes Case. Washington.—The accorded Gen. that be has surrendered, to prove a conclusive test of stability of the Madero government punishment prescribed for rebellion is death, but State Department officials here are inclined to believe that such & sentence will not be imposed, It is believed the military commis sion which will try General Reyes will will Presi the only Madero himself is believed, will degree of confidence he feels in his | GUARDING AGAINST TYPHOID. Marine Corps. Washington.-~Ag a supplementary | the Navy and Marine Corps, the com- and enlistad men of of the service under 45 years of age has been ordered by Secretary of the Navy Meyer. Al recruits will be | subjected to the treatment, and all those applying for reenlistment also | will take the treatment if they have not undergone it within two years previously or had a case of the fever. in case of doubt the order provides that it shall be administered. OB ENS Two Dead Under Slide Of Clay, New York.—Two men, Thomas Wil fiams and Herbert Cole, a negro, were caught today in a slide of ¢lay and sand in the Fourth avenue subway now being excavated in Brooklyn, and crushed to death. The slide was 80 feet below the surface of ihe street. ot Firemen Fight Snakes. HOLIDAY MEAL BROUGHT DEATH Thirty-Six Inmates of Berlin Shelter Poisoned. 40 OTHERS SERIOUSLY ILL Officials Startled By Groans From the Dormitories During the Night— The Shelter Housed Thou sands Of inmates. of tba for the lerlin— Eighteen inmates Berlin Municipal Shelter Homeless died during the night from poisoning, and 18 more died during the day, bringing the total number of deaths up to 36. Not less than 10 others are seriously ill from the same cause, i The number of | took refuge in the institution | day night was 4.414. Bome brought with them scraps extra food in order to give a Christmas { touch to the frugal meal of bread and | Boup served out to them by the aw | thorities. This extra delicacy consist ed In many cases of spoiled smoked ' herring, of which a large number par | took. Bhortly after midnight groans were heard coming from the dormi- tories, of which there are about 486, | and the officials on making an investi | gation found several men dying and | others in convulsions The physicians attached in- stitution at once administered emetics i and telephoned for help from the city hospitals, but gtate of many of the men was hopeless, and 18 of them died in a short time. The cause of announced, but that men who Wednes of them destitute 4 4 to the the has not yet been orities are fish are re The part completed substant! this to have par such death auth rid the confident the put sponsible iy autopsies appear to gle All those taken of the oes known are dead or in #8 to be unable throw e subject. It is eved, of the victims found A Tear- ARINCLE { view condition to ight on bell { however, fish in the garbage pile of market and divided them | his comrades & th that one the 1 by 4 al Night Shelter of Ber tion which provides a meal is forced The municip lin Is an inst sleeping acco to any destity AION Bang te person who to take refuge there at night in the course of the last 12 months it has given shelter to over 1,000,000 persons who were entirely without means of { subsistence. In the winter months | the number of inmates amount nightly | to between 4,000 and 5000 men, be sides a large number of women, and | the cost of providing for them is met by an appropriation out of the city | funds. PREFERS THE HELMET. General Futision. Says it is Better Than the Campaign Hat Washington. —Head covering has a good deal to do with making a sol dier, in the opinion of Brigadier Gen {eral Funston. Based on his experi ence as commander of the Department of Luzon, he strongly favors the hel met as against the campaign bat pointing to the fact that British sol (diers, who have had much experience lin the tropics, still stick to the helmet {and can drill and fight without knock. ing it off. American soldiers, General | Funston remarks, use the campaign thats as pillows foo often, and conse | quently press an untidy appearance, DOGS BETTER BRED. { West Virginian's Opinion Of Neighbor Who Kills Them. Elkins, W. Va—John T. Davis in | sorted an advertisement in a local pa iper to let some of his fellow-towns- i men know what he thinks of them. { This is the advertisement: “1 here { by offer $500 reward for the arrest and { conviction, or information leading to ithe arrest and conviction, of the | dastardly cur who is destroying bet | ter-bred dogs than himself” BEGGED TO BE HANGED. A a————— | But Court Imposes a Life Sentence } On Wife Slayer. : i { sentence death instead. He pleaded guilty, and told the judge his sentence should have been the heaviest impos ed by law, Honored By Emperor Of Germany. Berlin--The Emperor has conferred upon Her Von Kiderien- Waechter, Secretary of Foreign affairs the brik fiants and oak leaves of the Order of the Red Eegle of the first class. The secretary already possessed the order. Two Men Shocked To Death,