i bas ss Rn SR —— The Centre Reporter ——— CENTRE HALL PA STRIVING FOR EFFECT. It is pitiful to watch the struggles of those who in their worldly lives try to be what they are not. To gradually pass from a poor condition of life into a better one is vastly different from rushing from one extreme to the other, and the spectacle of striving to keep ap too high a pace is one of the most anedifying it is possible to observe, says the Charleston News and Courier, We gain nothing by such conduct un- less perhaps it is the applause of those whose favor we may try to cul tivate, but even then it often happens that those who praise are also severest critics. It would seem that we strike the keynote of a happy life when we play our parts naturally, not as gally attired puppets who dance and twirl for the amusement of others, but as sober-hearted, true-souled men and women who are content to be what they are and who only move across the stage of life for some good purpose. The only effects that are worth striving for are those that come to us naturally or by virtue of our best efforts in a worthy cause. They outlast all those other effects upon which we expend so much time and labor and which are at best merely artificlal. They may not be so won- derful In their color schemes; they may not rush across our vision like birds of brilliant hues that flit across the blue, but they gather radiance with the passing years. Their colors never fade, their results last forever and they linger long in the memory of those who are so fortunate as to have beheld their beautiful vision There can be no two opinions on the proposition that China sorely needs a new language to replace the many and widely varying dialects that now serve to divide, rather than to unite her people English, the language of trade and diplomas:y in the east, is the most available. tducated Chinese, natural linguists that they are, have found little difficulty in mastering It But how about the mass of the popa- lation? Will they find it just as easy? The day may come when English will be spoken quite generally in China, but that day is still far away dential decrees may hasten its coming a little, if they are backed up by edu- cational provisions. But In spite of ell that can be done to promote it the change must necessarily be of very slow growth. The men who are tak ing this occasion to put forth the plan might more properly be called dream- ers than progressives. Pres! It i# a curious fact that in the miid- est winter on record the price of fesh eggs in New York should have mount ed to an unprecedented height But there's a reason—at least there is said to be. The cold storage men, it is stated, have in stock no fewer than three hundred million dozen eggs, some of which they have held for a long time. They are afrald of carry- ing this stock indefinitely in the pres ent attitude of legislators toward cold storage. Therefore they are holding fresh eggs out of the market practi cally by putting a prohibitory upon them, and thus creating a cond} tion in which many people will buy “seconds” at figures that they would regard as extortionate at any other tive It's a great game-—from the standpoint of shrewd business, not trom the standpoint of fair dealing price If buckwheat which until a comparatively YOArs ago was thrown upon culm banks of the anthracite mines as worthless, is to be boosted In price, as reported, it means that much more élear profit to the producing companies and operators. From an economic stand point the utilization of what was once a waste product is a good thing for both the public and the producers, as it tends to prolong the life of the an- thracite regions, but it is hard to see what justification there can be in ex isting conditions for an advance In price. Doubtless the big companies, whose dividends range from 20 per cent. down to 6, need the money. and what more need be sald? coal, few the just Emotional women seldom bring hot house flowers to the commonplace a cow or picking a pocket volting murder. The Chinese have been doing more fighting than straw bralding, and straw hats next summer may be high priced. No one, however, in midwinter cares about what Is to happen in midsum- mer. “Tips are not seriously objection able until they take on the proportions of enforced bribes,” says the Washing ton Star. Perbaps so; but the trouble fs they do take on that aspect before they go very far. i ——— LORIMER GASE ENDS AT LAST ' Committee Closes the Public Hearings. INDULGE IN LOVE FEAST Attorney Hancey Files Brief To the Effect That Election Had Been Adjudicated and That a Second Inquiry Was Not Necessary. Washington. —Public hearings in the second senatorial Investigation intc the election of Senator Lorimer were declared closed by Chairman Dilling ham, of the Benate Lorimer Commit tee. Attorney Hanecy, representing Senator Lorimer, was given permis sion to file a brief to the effect that the Senator's election had been ad judicated before the present gation began and therefore could not be the subject investigation. The inquiry has proved to be one ot the most exhaustive ever made by a congressional committee. In the eight months’ hearing about 10,000 pages of printed testimony were taken, con- stituting about 5,000,000 words. It is estimated that the stencgraphers’ fees alone reached $15,000 The closing hour of the hearing was a veritable love-feast. The attorneys explained that they had never intend ed really to display temper and the committee added that it had not e tertained like intentions M investi that it 0. a4 second n 14] Ww who was discharged for his before the committee Saturday letter of which was read into the records Edward Hines called. He denied bribe Miss Helen telegraph operator, tO gee a4 message a private sent After his mittee decided at night, wrote a profuse was the last witne had Seavers, he to a testimony the co Al executive not to urther int leged Lorimer inquire bir fa ition against ¢ t OF as resuit rovement, or } commits hearing the The reed withesses, issue early hours of m by Sheridan, of testis of t} 8 detectis make a short-hand r sation, when Cat ¥h such as he sw Charles McGowan was ng before alleged to have admitted recets “perjuring” himself mittee moneys the od TURKS HOLDING ITALIANS. Of Three Italian Warships, Constantinople Tu entertain peace p retraction of Tripoll, according from the Turkish This statement sald, i powers as to key tions Turkish reports of tered rkey will : only roposals upon ti ing announcement 16 decree to Italy's annex counc was n answer the terms would enter inte officialdom was elated over crushing in Italian at Derna and Benghazi by the allied Turco Arab army Accord front the heavy loss of life, and pursued hv the Turks blo at Ainzara Oasis Additional firm earlier in the three Italian ships had been sunk Tobru Susa and here - Soft ads fg a gelea acminis to the erly i from the Italians wer with and Arabs to their khouse advices tending to «¢ reports Woe K. Taormina were ceived After Interstate Carriers ale Washington, Ti Interst merce Commission investigati ie ordered a ge mm of act Carriers ts op jr 1 34 £ ihn i ¥ interstate with t respe of issuance iransportation 1as reached the commissais carriers are violating the regard Indications are t fending carriers may be face prosecution. passes, f ranks service Information AW that of to i 3 y i in } it ie the obliged Death Of Dr. Talmage. Philadelphia. — Rev Rrank Dewitt Talmage died at his h here of heart failure superinduced by a nerv. ous breakdown. He was 44 years old Dr. Talmage was paste of the Cham. bers-Wylie Presbyterian Church. He came to his present charge from the First Presbyterian Church, Los Angeles, Cal. He also occupied pul pits in Chicago and Pittsburgh ome Madero Will Call Congress, Washington. An extra the Mexican Congress will be called to consider the desperate situation in { the republic, according to advices re { celved by the State Department. i i Wrecked By Dynamite. Waynesboro, Pa.—In an explosion of dynamite near here, twé men were severely hurt, two houses were dam: aged, telephone lines were severed and gas aed oll pipes ripped from the ground, One small building disappear. od in a cloud of smoke and splinters and the ofl and gas from the broken pipe lines were ignited, sending up tongues of flame 30 feet high. John Sheehan, 40 years old, a construction foreman, and Ehud Steel, aged 35, were badly burned and Injured. UNICN MEN IN DRAG NET Grand Jury At its Brings In Indictments—March Federal Completes Investigation and 12 Day For Arraignment, y labor offi number be the govern Union sald t Indianapolis, Ind ais and 0 30 Apents, Lween and 40, whom PATHETIC RETURN Fusillade of Flashlights Greet Morse in New York. McNamaras aud permitting more which in cit the Ortie {Or occurred ies fr Massa 351 the last six of :husetls years, and in wrecking Loos Angeles ncident, Tuesday return. been indicted are to 3 Were Capiases have ued and all secretly known 12 has before taken in custody on a day } i ty the vernment, but Week March on, in the ar bond in the reside names of num pending probably 40 re exact Tr med than than some of si +3 7 On a1 the me union offi hay : with wmrged amiters up” had District Asked iikher been States Vo Attorney Intimation ree, Charles Miller refused to came fr another Mn sou iowever, that no officials high th t head in ad had were er than quarters volved Frank Internation: and bert « Pros Bridge Her y-trea urer, when informed { h indict except to Jd. J. Me re spongi- SE ryes wy Struct and ¥ retlar onworkers, Ss BOA ments, fui ) ) ent, repeat Namara i} 14s ‘ x a Dilly aynamit. ing crew CENTENARY OF DICKENS. American Wreaths Upon His Grave in Westminster. centenary London he of the birth of Charles celebrated throughout the United Kingdom the by ens Dickens was and commemora ni and aii British colonies Dic} Live Bervics vais Car 1 i 7h ine minster nove i828 grave in West decorated great Abbey flowers, in f the was lavishly from the wreaths Clubs of witn Iuding many Dickens United Sta Rochester Cathelral was the special 0 tpt Mecea of great crowds of the author's admirers KILLED BY PLAYMATE. Lad Dies In Arms Of Boy Who Hit Him On the Head. Ind—Etruck on the head with a plece of coal by his playmate, Oscar Tharp, in a quarrel over a sled, Muncie, of cerebral hemorrhage. The boys didn’t mean to do i," was taken to police headquarters to be held pend. Soap Manufacturer Dead. New York-James T. Pyle, presi dent of James Pyle & Bons, soap manu facturers, dropped dead at his office in Weehawken, He was 68 years of Trolley Crash Kills Five. McKeesport, Pa. — Five persons were killed and 26 Injured when a trolley car on the Buena Vista divi sion of the West Pennsylvania Street Railway line jumped the tracks and went over an embankment near the DRAMATIC SCENE IN STATION Crowds Of Curious Persons Await His Feeble Wheeled In a Chair With His Wife At His Side. Coming — The Man ls New York. Ww wrecker ned 0 the Morse, bank and pard Federal viet, came back ' rmer triumpl iphs mpled up in a and his conviction, wheelchair, sii and impassive lay figure. With a whitefaced wif glide he is thror WAS Es 1iftled $y the quickiy 1 pushed through at hisked away to his home ! Fi eighth n Jdavs G cover his health, whic pr yn iife has Mo any nome-coming he not is thattered i if his Not emotion show d his lips during progress o trai to taxi The train from Atlanta, where Morse less than two years of his 15- than an hour photographers by oming 1 as it the station at there rush the front exit of the Pullman car bearing the Morse party had chair wheel chair from ab served YOar sentence, wae more late ts Heporters and 1¢ score awaited ite And swept into 5.2K Was a to detrainment A mos ions for his » 11 sfully up and made wheel - th nw) with a automatic Morse was quickly in a booming bh and lame. Everybody § shrank back photographer had taken the ker her Cras a umped, gm into the ! A first flash Mrs husband light of the returning ban looked the smoke to the chair Her fac but she said nothing Dr. Fowler said “Morse Morse anxiously at cleared and as it was was ashen aR pressed close AWAY e the BOCmMR has stood remark and stronger, but these reports about his rapid restora tion to good health are untrue. Morse live a great while. 1 hazard a guess to how | tei irip ably well cannot ong, but the is aff au maladies with which are incurable.” rece ved he icted information was had no eired pardon here that Morse chance of gecuring the d Taft from President NOT A QUITTER, SAYS “T. BR." V/ith Progressives. York. —"1 don't my bitterest enemies will I was ever a deserter,” A. P New that BAY Colonel Moore, publisher believe that Moore. can say to the Progressives” Roosevelt is quoted by Mr. Moore by side with them to the Men Blown To Pieces. Meriden, Conn--Adam J. Engel hardt was blown to pieces and the main building of the Meriden Auto mobile Station, of which he was the proprietor, was wrecked when an acetylene gas machine blew up in the building. Same Right As Men. New York.-~Woman suffragists con- gratulated themselves on an important convert, when Mrs. Carl Osterheld, president of the West Chester County Women's Suffrage Association, re celved a favorable response to a let- ter she had written William LL. Ward, Youghiogheney Country Club House, six miles from this city. The car got beyond control of the motorman on a steep grade and after pitching over the embankment crashed Into a tree and was smashed to pleces. Republican national committeer.an om New York. “In reply ‘no gour nguiry,” wrote Mr. Ward, “1 beg to wivise you that I believe women thould have the same right to vote as men have.” MADERO LOSING SUPPORTERS Of His Ministers Are Aiding the Rebels—8tories Of Crooked- ness In the Army. will 1 he Mexico City.—"For no reason change any of my ministers members of my cabinet are honorable not I shall glandered men. They are patriots them to be are glandering them President permit any of you In words brought to a termination an interview the these Madero by a committee from anti party, which to persuade him to # was Mir tempting dismiss from his cabinet the ministers of war and interior. The conference had up the moment spokesman of the committee a statement of the evilminded Mexicans were aiding rebels, declared that this was tr | and that moreover the President knew men because they mem- {bers of his own cabinet then peremptorily interview ! In | tredo proceeded when the in reply President that the to to ue, {these Were The ended Presi dent the Al of line with this incident Robles Dominguez, woune | Madero's stanchest supporters dur the revolution, publicly criticised that in removal of the ing the administration, his not entire cabinet could save the adminis stating opinion even the tration The visit of the committee to Pres Madero was to interpeliate hi {regarding the of regular for drink turn bought up by t are stories of haciendados havi great in from robbery, but the all iz that sent from the government the capital itself f the dent source supplies gued to troops and and and in There fur- for by them food he rebels ng nished return ur immunity report mos serious of supplies have been in O g ale Arsenals Scores President's most ago carts ardent supporters of six months are speculating on his ability t the country through the present eris is PASTOR A POOLPLAYER. the Billiard Halls Newport, Champion In Of Washingt bers of his flock disco The preacher was the champion hearing disclosed ¢ the aver hat PoOoi and business men threat withdraw fre 1¢ church if he T investigating commitiee recommended ft the pastoral relations 24 new members were added to church of the town, ened to thelr support yn tt Was removed he that ¢ ve conting ¥ } and rolis $3,000,000 IN MAIL BOXES. Placed In OneCent Pieces In Rural Receptacles Durirg Year. Washington. During the last year over 300,001 one-cent pieces, n tended as payment for stamps, posal orders, were collect carriers bad cards and by the boxes money rural which ed from been mail in they de posited Postmaster General t warning ose who receive mail through ru carriers t they should deposit no more coins the Hitchcock sent a ail a to all th their ou rai nat in ir boxes. If they must buy stamps money orders hereafter they go to the postmaster or con the carrier on their route and should sult ALL HANDS SAVED. Entombed Miners DNescued Without injury. Sutfer Creek, Cal-—-The sixty-two miners entombed in the Bunker Hill Mine by in in the mouth of the shaft, rescued after a night hard work by miners from nearby | mines. None the men injur They were greeted by their wives a cave of were of were {ed {and daughters as they came out of the shaft Major Logan Dead. YY. R recently Chicago Major Logan, custodian of the opened Glacier National Park in Montana, and ‘a veteran Indian authority, died here {from heart disease. Major Logan was {54 years old and leaves a widow and | two daughters, His father, an old | Indian fighter, is buried on Custer's | Inst battlefield, and his son will be interred beside him Former Justice White Dead. Buffalo, N. Y.~Truman C. White, former justice of the Supreme Court, who pronounced the death sentence upon Leon Czolgosz, assassin of Presi. dent McKinley, and presided at many lowing an operation he reached the prescribed age limit, Relics From the Maine. Washington. — Already about 350 claimants have appeared for the relics from the wreck of the battleship Maine which are now on board the collier Leonidas on the way to the Washing. ton Navy Yard. Under the terms of the law distribution of the relics is to be made among municipalities, patri otie societies, survivors of the Maine and the relatives of the victims of the disaster. The articles comprise a strange and incongruous collection, ranging from a few six-inch guns dowr to brass buttons and crockery. | A | s——— TOLD IN SHORT ORDER srr o— 4 No ~ Bouth Bethlehem Aldinger made known her to Emmett Mack, of Phillipsburg, South stopper in a bottle Will fered badly cut bands when the exploded Anna M betrothal J. Mins , ox hem While h placing a Frueh f Bi bottie jethile nm Coplay.——Hit by a piece of stone fol- lowing an explosion in Edward Arthur suffered right leg South is announced of Somers der, glone quarry, aired “a vot ras i Bethlehem. The engagement of Miss shapiro, ie, N. J. to Alexan- of South Reading. — At g of the High- way cided to report fay a meetin Committee of Counc WEE Co the bill 8 it orably to Board of Public 07 abolish the Works Allentown. — City incils started providing HHon-doll mii legislation puiar r Yote on a fa ihe ¥ 4 construction of a seweras Fredericksaville A wildes n the has kept gE that iy hills in Longswamp tows sportsmen busy, and several dog encountered bas bitten the re Done ninick tracks h Gap result Bethlehem was iving along the between Walnutport ¢ found bored found rosa as Aan i Lenig with his right leg severed as the un dower i QOUWIE of having been r hton Badly UNIINE season iK bh explogion of by t Hig gun, i“ fas recovered sufficien the ho appoint upon the pass the erection center branch # ing of the Read- there At a meet Grocers’ Association was & discussion of the high prices of The Association by Congress of the man om this vote for the food commodities favors the bill to PAEEARLe remove the tax on oles Congressman fr garine and the n fr agked to district was noise the cel Center Elmwood Mine A heating lant and merchandise { several hundred dollars The opening in than feet wide gleam to the value © were swallowed the earth is is of unknown depth Edith Ford Sheets, u Pp more 20 and Johnstown housekeep. Adam Nasehy Glo, miles from city, was committed to jail in default $400 bail here on a charge of aggravated assault and battery on the allegation that seared the back of Sheets’ three-year-old son with a hot poker She said she burned the child to break him of a habil, but did not know th implement was so hot. er for of seventeen this of : eho Allentown. Because of the consid. ering of the proposed new constito. the stockholders the Allen- town Fair for the first time in the six ¥ Oi A clause in the new from twentyfive to fifty cents was overwhelmingly defeated. The stock holders also declined to permit the executive committee to fix the salaries of the ofiicers. Harrisburg. — The receivers of the Central Iron & Steel Co, of this city, filed a bond for $200,000 and assumed their duties in charge of the works. It is the expectation to put the plant into operation to take care of orders on the books. Reading. ~ During the absence of hig wife, who was in Reading on a shop- ping trip, Jacob Behm, thirty-seven years old, a blacksmith, wert to the barn at his home at State Hill, and sont a bullet through his head. Death was instant. No cause can be assign ed for his act