The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 22, 1912, Image 2

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    CENTRE HALL PA
COMMERCIAL AVIATION.
Carrying passengers and freight in
pirships as a definite transportation
enterprise is perhaps a long way off,
but significant of the faith of men in
the possibilities of commercial avia-
tion is the formal incorporation of a
company in New Jersey for this pur-
pose, says the Washington Herald.
The expressed intention of the incor
porators set forth in the articles of
incoration is the “building and opera-
tion of and the carriage of passengers
and freight in aeroplanes.” As fre-
quenily pointed out, the science snd
practice of aviation is making remark-
able progress. By means of the diri-
gible airship and the hydro-aeroplane
experts have begun to see that it will
be possible some time to use the air
a8 a means of transit, much as the
earth is now employed for that pur:
pose. As bearing upon the question
of realizing this end, it 1s only nececs-
sary to consider that the evolution of
the locomotive and steamship has been
slow; that it has taken many years
to bring the trolley car to perfection,
and that the automobile is at least a
quarter of a century old as a practical
road machine Fast as the alrmer
bave progressed with their Invention
and experiments, we need not expect
much greater advancement in a less
period of time than has been the case
with vehicles running on land and
through the seas
The entire property of Illinois 1s re-
ported to be $2,318,333,241. If that
were divided among the people each
one would get $411.11. Where in ten
years from now would that per capita
be? It would undoubtedly undergo
& great change. A few men would
have $500,000 of it, a few more $100,-
000 of it; many more $50,000, and so
on until we get to the point where
very many men wouldn't have 15
cents. How can we account for this
wonderful change? For various rea
sons. Some men are smarter than
others, some more diligent, some more
frugal, some more temperate. These
facts can explain why this $411 per
capita has disappeared. While the
circumstances, the environment, the
vicissitude may account for some of
the change, most of the change can be
referred to the man himself
acter, his habit, his disposition, his
appetite—under the influences of
which, if bad, that $411 vanishes snd
reappears in the hands of the man
who has been sober, diligent, frugal
and wide awake
his char
Gossip In Great Britain continues to
wag its tongue over the reported cool
ness between King George and tlhe
Gaekwar of Baroda. The story per
eists that at the durbar everyone was
astonished at the Gaekwar's appear
ance in a black frock coat, while the
other princes wore thelr native robes
and marvelous gems. The queen, It
is sald, gave the Gaekwar a frozen
stare and the king merely nodded.
The Caekwar responded-with a curter
nod, turned his back and made a dis-
tinct grimace. It is asserted that his
punishment, aside from forcing an
apology, will be that of cutting down
his royal salute of twenty-one guns
and classing him as a second-rate
ruler. Anglo-Indians consider this
dangerous, and believe the Incident
would better have been ignored, on
account of the Gaekwar's great wealth
and popularity among his subjects.
Urotropin is the name of the drug
which Dr. Simon Flexner of the Rock-
efeller Institute of Medical Research
declares to be an antidote for infan-
tiie paralysis. The dread disease has
carried off thousands of victims, and
if Dr. Flexner's cure proves to be all
that is claimed for it, that alone will
entitle the doctor and the Rockefeller
institute to be famous for all time to
come.
A dramatic soclety Is advertising
the revival of hissing In the theaters
as a mark of disapprobation of plays
approval is more significant than any
amount of hissing, besides much more
civil and civilized.
because he wants him brought
among people who have no particular
respect for a title
Jblace.
A cigarette manufacturer tells us
that there are two million women In
the United States who smoke. All of
which goes to show that the falr dames
have devious ways of burning up their
husbands’ salaries.
Man, aecording to the results of in.
vestigations of the Soclete Jersaise,
is five hundred thousand years old.
And sometimes, after a hard day's
eprint In the wake of the elusive dol
iar, he feels every minute of It
i
1
i
|
|
|
|
i
HOW BEEF PRICES
ARE FORGED UP
Eastern Markets.
IN EVIDENCE
Armours' Manager To the Eastern
Agents—More Light On Meth
ods Of Beef Packers.
Seven hundred and twen-
ty-five telegrams sen T. C.
manager of Armour & Company's beef
department, and his assistants, in
July and August, 1910, tc Eastern rep
resentatives, urging obtain
higher prices for dressed meat,
introduced in evidence by the govern
ment in the packers’ trial here. The
messages, which were over
Armour & Co.'s private were
identified by H. A. Russell, beef sales
manager for the company, who
on the witness stand all day.
The government contends
Chicago.
vy Lee
them to
were
sent
wires,
was
that the
was used by Armour & Co. as
basis for the selling price and that the
Eastern representatives were continu
ally urged to this figure
their product. to obtain the
memorandum ‘n the
branch house managers being severely
criticised
In many instances the Chicago office
threatened to reduce shipments unless
better prices were obtained. The gov
ernment declares that by this system
the prices controlled and all
shipments regulated from the Chi
cago office. One of the messages read
to the jury was as follows
Chicago, August 8,
Charles Custer Philadelphia
you forgotten how to sell beef?
showigg this is
fierce
cost
obtain
Failure
cost resulted
were
1810
Your
Ween something
LEE
Another message read:
Chicago, July 5, 1910
Philadelphia Well, 1 have
you for worst work
seen since | have been in
the department What our Washing
ton houses did last week has never
been equalled by any Armour house 1
ever heard of any place, any
under any circumstances
T
Never,
(C Kive it
I ever have
to the
time,
G. LEE
MOVING PICTURES OF TAFT.
The President Sees Himself In Action
At White House.
Washington.—A private
picture show was given the execu
tive offices to permit the President and
Mrs. Taft to pass on the pictures taken
of them recently The Con
reception-room was darkened and
picture ne set up
moving
ii
rressional
the
motion mach
exhibition
The pictures show
the act of gigning
admitting Arizona to
President and Mrs
through the White
Secretary Hilles leavin
offices; Major Bu
aid, in full regimentals;
House newspaper men
prominent callers and other scenes of
the daily life and activity at the White
House
LOT
the President
in
the proclamation
statehood: the
Taft walking
Bre
executive
President's
the Wh
nterviewing
House unds;
K the
tt, the
ite
-an
GRADUATE CONVICTS.
Fifteen College and University Men
in Penitentiary.
Walla Walla, Wash, February 16
Varden C. 8. Reed, of the Washing
ton State Penitentiary, sald last night
that 15 college and university grado
ates, are serving time in t institu
tion
From this number he will
teachers for the night school, which is
now under consideration by the State
Board of Control, and which is expect
ed to be established in the near
future.
He
ae
choose
Wants Pacific Submarine Fleet.
Washington, February 16.— The con-
struction of an additional submarine
torpedo fleet for the protection of the
Pacific Coast was urged before the
Naval Affairs Committee of the House
today by Representative Hayes, of
The Oldest Elk.
Shenandoah, la John H
who Friday celebrated his one hun.
him the oldest E'k in the country
A German Aviator’s Fatal Fall.
Berlin. ~~ The German
died from
yesterday in his biplane. The cause
Ghost Corespondent,
Macon, Ga.—A ghost figured ag co
respondent in divorce proceedings
here, when George W. Mann told the
court that his young wife was haunt.
ed by the shade of her former hus
band, to whom she made a promise
that after his death she would never
marry. She became so despondent
from remorse, Mann says, that he con
sented to a separation and then ap-
plied for divorce. He was given his
fecree,
HIDDEN
‘BOLD ROBBERS GET $25,000
Transporting the Money In a
Taxicab—Chauffeur Held At
Bay By a Pistol.
New York
| dollars in currency
taxicab in the heart of the financial
district by two highwaymen
Epraug into the vehicle
ed W, F ait
messengers of t
{| Bank, 680
sengers badly injured and
robbers escaped with the money
$15,000 in $5 blils and $10,000 in $100
The currency was being trans
the Pre Exchange
lower part of the city
thousand
wae stolen from a
Twenty-five
ana gverpower-
Smith and
River National
Both
the East
at Broadway mes-
Were the
bills
ported from
{ Bank in the
The taxicab had proceeded
i way without mishap, when
unexplained reason the
turned west on Rector
Church street, skirting the
rear of Trinity ard
duce
chauffeur
#lreet
side
into
and
churchy
sprang from the curb,
the chauffeur's
One jumped on
seal, the
The man «
revolver in
other two got
yn th
overcoat
the chauf-
commanded
into the vehicle geal
pressed
ie
nis
of
a
pocket against the
feur, Gino Martini
bim to drive swiftly on without mak-
ing an outcry
Inside the
Bice
and
vehicle the two robbers
the mes
he was
unconscious when
Park Place
Warde
over the head. Smit} of
is 61 vears ol
bleeding and almost
the taxicab reached
blocks
beaten about the
hurt
Park
d, and
a few
badly
seri-
north il was
head, but not so
ously
At
jumped from the
box which they } m the
messengers, and contained the
In geh they had sprung
big i which
to coming,
Place the highwaymen
taxicab bearing a tin
at wrested fro
w ch
currency
a
seemed
and
traffic
into
Were quick
Hold-ups and v-anatching
have
in New Yor
becor alm demic
k in the
games ost ep
past few weeks
SENSATION IN ARMY.
Adjutant General F. C. Ainsworth To
Be Court-Martialed.
11
Washington — The biggest military
sensation in the past quarter of a cen
tury was sprung
when Secretary of War
won Washington
Stimson an
nounced that Major General Fred. C.
Ainsworth, adjutant general of the
Army, the most powerful military man
the entire had been
ed from duty under charges. The ac
means that Alnus
worth will be court and the
trial will m since
the court of inquiry in of the
late Rear Admiral Scott
Schley, of Maryland
The charges General Ains
worth have not formulated, but
grow out of his independent character
and ability as military officer and
| will probably be based on grounds of
conduct to the prejudice of good or
discipline and insubordination
in gervice, reliev.
Major General
tion
martialed
be the wt important
the case
Winfield
Against
beer
a
der,
Kansas City Journal Drops From Two
To One Cent.
Kansas City, Mo
| Journal announced a cut in price from
two cents a copy to one cent on pa-
pers bought on the sircets and on
a week on papers delivered to
scribers. The Journal last week made
| of-town readers.
Mother and Children Burned.
Sharon, Pa-Mre. John Purdue and
near the Diamond Coal Mine at Grove
City.
Burned Baby In Stove.
Halifax, N. 8.—~Mre. Ada McCarren
put her fiveweeks' old baby in the
stove and burned it to death, accord.
ing to a confession which the police
say she made when arrested on sus
picion that she could account for the
disappearance of her child, which had
been missing for nine days. Small
bones found in an ash barre: in the
house led to the arrest of the woman,
who had previously explained the
child's disappearance by saying that
it had been kidnapped.
LABOR UNION MEN
Cific.al Staff of Ironworkers
Apprenended.
GOES OVER BANK
Three People Killed and Sixly-
seven Hurt,
CARS ON FRIVER'S EDGE
Eastbound Limited Jumps Track At
Warriors Ridge, and Nine of the
Eleven Cars Roll Down An
Embankment.
Pa
killed and 67
{the Pennsylvania Lim
Huntingdon, Three persons
Were were injured when
mited No east
wound, jumped the track at Warriors
| Ridge, a short distance west of this
Of the eleven Cars
to
place, and nine
olled down an embankment the
| edge of the Juniata River
Warrior the accident
occurred,
Ridge, where
located in beautiful
d it is along the
Pennsylvania
The train, con
and
milies
more
of the
is the
Juniata Valley
River
Rallroad tracks
an
Juniata
i
{
|
ting of 10 passenger cars a
postal left Altoona, 30
west of the scene of the accident,
Atl
the |
coach,
than an hour late the time
mitted
sald, WHA
rate of 50 miles an hour.
was drawn
Warriors
sec
disaster, it is
going at the
Ag the heavy train, which
by two
Ridge, the
locomotives, neared
equalization bar on the
OTHER UNIONS ARE INVOLVED
iden
it
The Government Reveals the
Of Whom
Charges With Being the Accom.
plices Of the
tities the Men
McNamaras.
Indianapolis Ind The
States government arrested almost
of the 54 men indicted in
mite
It
hours
staff of
of Bridge and Structura
conspiracy cases
took into custody
practically
the Internat
including the
of the executiy
business agents
Those
president
N Y.
Herbert
and
agents
Ryan, t
Buffalo
dent,
he John
of the first
and 8. Hockin
ond of J
J
and each
Bive $10. 001
ance arraignment
the
More than
offic
vice-president and successor
McNamara as secretary-treasurer,
of these wore ired
men requ
to bond for his appear
all
March 12
efiy labor
with
for here, with
other defendants, on
40 of the men, chi
union
conspiring
nitroglycerine the
ers of n
arrest
3%
Kis charged
fx
Who are
by
property of employ
gestr cynamite or
§ . : sidar
on-union labor, are uncer
ite act he government re-
vealed the identities of the men whom
th being
MeNamarass
it charges =» the accomplices
Artie E. Mc
the CYS ie pians, em
explosions, which
Massachuse
of the and
Manigal in
bracing
were
1905 ;
g 14
aimost 1
gun
which
tte
Were
x
scattered over
VEATE whit
wrecking of
iilding
up Fresident
Santa Barbara,
country for s and
sulted in
Angeles Times ©
tempt to
gpecial train
lagt October
Fourteen of those
¢
anc
al
ndicted are
210.000
to
each
bond and
furnish
bond
required t«¢ irnish
40 are ea
$5,000 bond, making an aggregate
required of $340.000
Ernest G. W. Basser,
ness agent of the Indianapolis
workers’ Union Edward
former business agent of the Cincin-
nati Union, who were brought here
following their arrest at Cincinnati,
were unable to obtain hail were
taken ail. When Clark appealed
to Secretary Hockin, of the Ironwork:
ers’ Association, for aid, Hockin ad
vised the United States Marshal to
inform Clark International
Association nothing for
him, and referred him to his
local union Hockin said it uld
be impossible for the International As
sociation to take on the burden of
supplying bail for many the nen
arrested
cl uired
ref
busi
iron
Clark,
former
and
r
0
and
to
the
could de
wo
of
MONEY TRUST REPORT.
| Committee May Decide the Scope Of
! Its Inquiry.
Washington. «- Following the last
i stand by Representative Henry for the |
Bryan pian to bave a drastic investi.
gation of the Money Trust, the Rules |
Commimee of the House reported with
out amendment the Pujo resolution,
| which leaves to the discretion of the |
Banking and Currency Committee the |
scope of the inquiry into the trust.
i
EE a
Ending Textile Strike.
Lawrence, Mase ~The efforts of offi.
cials of the American Federation of
Labor to bring about a peaceful set
tlement of the big textile strike are
progressing slowly but surely, and the |
outlook is regarded on sll sides as
bright. At conferences between the
mill men and their employes the
agents of all but three of the mills
took the demands of the strikers un.
der consideration. The other millg}
the Atlantic, Pemberton and the Ever.
ott-—offered to treat with their em-
ployes.
This bar is over the trailer wheel and
holds up the spring of the loc
The first car
struction, but ni
the tracks and
motive
the ob
Cars
down
passed over
ne
FuUCCesCing
11y
jumped dropped
ink of the
The observation car remain
i the rails. As the ponderous steel
ith human dashed
the telegraph poles
slems
who
their freight
bank
» snapped off like pipe
The groans of the injur
a] were
pinneg with
ful As quickly as possible the
party released most
jured and hurried them to a
in the steel cars were piti
relief
the seriously in.
local hos
pital
All of
fining ¢
}. E
dining
railed
werd n the first
killed
Harry A
Tavenner, two of the
those
ar Mass and Mrs
4
Killed, were
at the time the train was de
The awful
into the forward end
they
67 persons in
hrew them
impac
gainer
Of
given at
while the
in
vol
and
were crushed the
$2 re
3 aired, 51
Were
in the local
ng 16
were
tentic hospital
remain who sustained minor
juries, looked after by the
unteer physicians
MONUMENT TO THE MAINE.
Lald With Impressive
New York,
Corner-Stone
Ceremonies In
New York
ional Maine Monument was laid by
Rear Admiral E H. C 8
N., commandant of the Brooklyn Navy
Yard, at the Columbus (
Cent Park The
designed to ocdmmemorate an epoch-
making American history-
the destruction of the battleship Maine
in Havana harbor 14 years ago, on
February 15, 1888, and 2+ a tribute to
the men who perished the disaster
in the
The corner-sto
Ne wd
Na
Leutze, U
recie entrance
$
to rai
monument is
vent in
event in
and war with Spain
WILLS HORSES BE SHOT.
Matilda Church-Keller Dces Not Want
Others To Get Them.
of the
Worm
Harrisburg, Pa -—The will
late Matilda Church-Keller, of
leysburg, near here, just probated pro-
vides that the family horses. which
she had used for vears, are to be shot
prevent them falling into
other hands The estate is worth
$30,000, of which $15.000 goes to a
church named in bonor of her family
to from
SET HIS OWN LEG.
Physician Crawls Mile.and a Half
After Accident
Clarion, Pa His leg broken as the
result of a runaway in a sparsely set
tied part of this county, Dr. Lee O'Dell
crawled on his hands and knees a mile
and a half to the nearest farmhouse,
get the limb himself and when another
physician arrived, sme hours later,
he pronounced the job perfect
140,000 Treated for Hookworm,
Washington. -~More than 140,000
persons in nine States of the South
the hookworm
commission just made public,
Bakers Cut Out Cakes.
Altoona, Pa Many
PENNSYLVANIA
STATE NEWS
Newsy Items Gathered From
All Parts of thes State.
combined
Univereglly
and
Bethlehem. The
musical clubs of Lehigh
have elected Crellin,
Porter, manager,
South
president,
South Bethlehem
Hunter, deputy
missioner, gave a talk on
his department at Lehigh
A
tral Raliroad engine jumped the
2
ured
State 1
Mauch Chunk New Jers
here as the result of spreadin
but no one was seriously inj
Rosensack The large flour mills
of Oswin Stahl, on Indian Creek, ne
Powder
The
ar
Valley, were destroyed by fire
joss exceeds $10,000
Prohibitionists of this
lebanon
county, nere
y, at
to put up a stiff fight during the
ing campaign and to ally themeelves
with no other party
a convention GeCIGH0
con
Harrisburg — Receivers of the Cen
tral Iron &
operating the plant
an order of the court, gave no
Steel Company, who are
this city
# 1a
a reduction in wages would be
E
after
Ward lay
fa i
Albert
an hour
ewalk, avaking
He was almost
Allentown
conscious
slippery sid
leg was
from
a
to Ii?
broken dead
cold
Richard, the three vear
John A
qd was
Allentown
old son of Mrs
on the
parents
three hours
Devlin, turned
stove an found ap
gas i
mother It
took
reguscitiate hor
dead by his
work to
Maldencreek The will
Franklin Seidel, f«
miseioner
estate,
Ig te
Berks,
3 3
vYaiued
of
widow
(Centerport Willis Ke
I ¥ rt :
izinger
oldest resident of town, died at the age
of ninety years He was the oldest
member of the Blue ntaip Church,
Strausstown
All Fensgtermacker
1d rw
+E
a farmer near Danielsville, committed
je ng himself in
Buc
the heart He was
four vears old wag despon
sixty
ent from grief over death
Washington i; v-five thousand
pounds of wi cars, left
5
ere for Philadel was from
Washington and
iaArge
phia
sreene counties
ana
the first shipment from this sec
tion
Ira M
heaviest
at
Leb ooth, forty-six vears
old, 1
county, his
berg township He
and tl inches 1t
three
345 pounds
Anon
h lebanon
Heidel
ie
in
was only five feet
but
died home
all, weighed
South Bethlehem hor
The
word th
igh off
ciale have received at the
State health department has approved
the plans of Borough Engineer Robert
E for sewage disposal
plant
Neumeyer a
Kindler,
b
Harrisburg John C
fire chief,
a
former as beep
asgisiant
fire chief by Mayor Royal,
A seTV.
administrations ( F
been app assistant
appointed
to succeed C Garverich, who
ed in three
Spicer inted
chief
South Bethlehem The
Club,
has
Mustard and
of Lehigh Uni
Cheese Dramatic
versity, chose J. E f Bethle
hem, and C. Ll. Downing as coaches
The club will make trips this year tr
Washington, D. C.;: Reading, Pottsville
and Lebanon, possibly,
Gheen, o
Beach Haven. — Standing at the head
a horse, Thomas Denn, of near
here, had his band seized by the ani
mal, which swung him back and forth
in the stall until the flesh had been
ripped off his hand and the bones laid
bare
of
Bloomsburg ~—Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel
Ditz, of Jamison rounded out
fifty vears of married life, celebrating
the occasion with a golden wedding
Mr. and Mrs. John White. of Nesco-
peck, the day before celebrated thelr
fitty-ifth wedding anniversars
Bethel Jonathan Zellers and Geo
Peters, two farmers who doubted the
reports that most of the fruit buds
were killed by the recent cold
weather, placed cherry buds in water,
near a fire, and the buds blossomed
forth into flowers. George Peters a
shoemaker, during the zero weather,
discovered a yellow butterfly on the
window gill of his shop.
Coudersport The case against
George CC. Bayless, president. and
Fred. N. Hamlin, superintendent of
the Bayless Pulp & Paper Company,
involuntary
manslaughter in connection with. the
City,
will discontinue baking cakes,
tarde, cookies and other pastry for the
time being.
Held Up Whole Town.
New Albany, Ind Two men held
up the little town of Greenville, Ind.
in Wild West fashion, and for two
hours not a citizen showed himself
out of doors while Charles Lee and
Louis Morgan paced up and down the
length of the main street with drawn
revolvers, uttering threats and whoops
of defiance. Finally Sheriff Anthony
Fisher arrived in ahswer to telephone
calls and put the men under arrest
They offered no resistance to the offi.
cer who brought them here and put
them in the county Jail,
{
last, hag been continued until the June
term of court. The postponement was
granted at the request of attorneys for
the defendants in order that the base
weather permits
agreed.
Berwick Fire, started by the ign
tion of gasoline being used In blow
pipes by electricians on the firet floor
of the wheel foundry of the American
Car & Foundry Co.'s plant, did damage
in the sum of $1,500.
Wyalusing. Stephen Post has tre=
ped in the ravines and on the wooded
hills across the Susquehanna, during
the recent season, 1563 muskrats, seven
opossums, ten minks and thirteen
skunks. The opossums have come
into these parts within the past doren
years, having worked north from the
southern part of the State
The prosecution