i The Centre Reporter CENTRE HALL PA ENGLISH SPEECH POR CHINA, -— ly the number of inhabitants by the peoples of the different vinces. sumber at “over a hundred.” pro- practically distinct languages. darize these languages into one com- mon speech for the whole would be a work of many years and of immense difficulties. In fact, it would seem to be an undertaking involving greater difficulties than the introduce tion of a complete new tongue. And it must be remembered that ficla! and educated classes are familiar already with English. The language is taught in the universities and many of the schools. other governments. At the same time, the leaders of the new movement are enthusiastic friends of our country. If the republican movement shall sue ceed, that success may be followed by the transformation of the Chinese into an English-speaking people It. was noted in these columns re cently that the price of platinum In the New York market had risen to the highest figure ever reached —over sev- eu hundred dollars a pound. All over the world the demand fo: platinum arising from the use of the metal in electrical appliances has made it high- 1, prized. In connection with this sub Ject a curious story comes from Paris. It Is sald that a number of twenty- franc gold pleces forged In the reign of Napoleon 111, have been found to be worth at least double thelr face value. This Is due to the fact that in the alloy of which these forged coins were made platinum was used At that time platinum was cheap. A pound weight of it could be bought for a few sovereigns The spurious twen- ty-franc pieces contain about six grammes of platinum each, and today these sii grammes are worth azbout A crusade on “fads and frills” in the public schools of the city is to be start. od in New York, with more thorough ness and less experimentation as its slogan. Everywhere there seems atir- ring this revolt against the excessive system of experiment to which the schools have been subjected. with cor responding loss of thorough grounding in essentals. The educational tbe orles of the present seem to share the prominent American craze for speed more or less regardless of the risks i#volved in attaining It. The agitation, which appears to be gemeral, win doubtless result in restoring the pen- dulum in both of conservatism and progress, to its noraal swaying which has swung too far directions It's well to be clean, but if you wash your rugs with gasoline, be careful A Springfield, Mass, merchant, who fs fastidious, bad bis office rugs scrubbed with gasoline and then gone over with a vacuum cleaner operated by electricity. The cleaner collected gasoline fumes which were ignited by an electric spark, whereupon there was an explosion and a blaze necessitating a call on the fire department That collision between a steamship fn the merchant service and a United States armored cruiser in the harbor of Honolulu, in which the cruiser was 80 badly damaged as to necessitate fon nediate retirement for repairs, whie tte merchant ship steamed off apps rently uninjured, might be cited as i) lustrating Kipling’'s agsertion to the effect that the "weaker vessel” is the deadlier of the two. dience that In order tc obtain pictures of what happened when a drop of wa- ter fell into a vessel containing water tric spark of the duration of millionths of a second. Some perhaps, Prof. Worthington will three day, store soda-fountain wink One of the baseball umpires much while umpiring. It lsn't what It Is proposed in Spokane to make no policeman out of applicants whose valsts are greater than their chests. However, rotundity will come with po. lice service, as of old. A Chicago man says ragtime is as dangerous as whisky. And just as dis agreeable to take. The debt of New York is larger than thet of the nation. But then New York has all our money. MINERS REFUSE 10° GOMPROMISE Are Off. WHITE EXPECTS A WALKOUT Operators Regard Demands sible Of Concession—No Formal Strike Will Be Declared Until After March 285. impos New York. —"All negotiations with the anthracite coal operators are off,” at the adjournment of the meeting between the miners and operators, in § tors’ counter proposition. work on April 1,” he added. What They Demand. Reiterating demands for a recogni of per cent. in wages, a shorter working day and other changes, the Mine osition offered them by the cite coal operators. The operators’ proposition clined, The meeting between the miners and the operators was brief Mr. White read to the operators the min. ers’ reply to their rejection of minereg’ demands. It was received without comment, and the meeting adjourned without delay. is i i i i i i i f AGAIN Motion To Quash the Indictments ls Overruled By Judge Anderson— Thirty: Days Granted To De- fense To File Exceptions. Indianapolis, Ind —"Not guilty” was Federal Court here on indictments lo talk. Reply Of Miners. “We regret the positive position you have taken,” the miners’ reply reads, "ag we had hoped that as the representatives of the anthracite coal operators you would consider the great change in conditions existing now as compared with those of 1802, upon which the Coal Strike Commis glon gave its award; and would, there reasonableness of anthracite mine such concessions market conditions living unquestion- of the make the demands workers and as induetrial and and conditions of ably now warrant “Your proposal to renew pres ent agreement does not appeal to us, nor will it appeal to the people we represent. The award of the Strike Commission was not intended to continue in effect for all time thereafter, regardiess of how ma terially Industrial and other condi tions might change, and does not adequately meet changed conditions now in effect’ The reply says in conclusion “Now, firmly believing that as pub lic-spirited citizens we have done more our full duty during «li! years when anthracite operators joyed unprecedented that the follow gattiement the Coal than these en prosperity, we which 8 =at's at feel responsibility might re ia failure to reach clory of the gu bv 1 e placed egtions weighed a diseri cannot t mine-workers or issue, when ing public, Rr the reseniatl minat up the acite their rep ves DR. WILEY RESIGNS, Food Expert Says He Mas No State ment To Make Now. WwW. Wiley. Uncle S8am’s chief chemist and father Washington. — Harvey of the Pure . ood Law, ended his long and gOV- ernment Friday, tendering his resigna- tion Wil son “There is no statement I can make now,” was his declaration “Dr. Wiley has resigned; that is all I can say now,” was the comment of Secretary of Agriculture Wilson Dr. Wiley's resignation caused no great surprise, following numerous reports that he would sever his con nection with the government because of constant conflict in his department honorable service with the to Secretary of Agriculture spiracy unlawfully to transport dyna- mite from state to state. Judge A. B Anderson overruled all demurrers of but granted 30 days for the filing of exceptions to his ruling. A motion to consolidate the by United States District Miller, was the defense, made At toruey Charles W tained, attorneys for the defense if they cide to trials petition for separate 1} La the defend of The trial was set for The court instructed at Anis appear when presentation the matier is made. October 1 When he 4 fendants, announced 0 Anderson demwurrers to the had been Judge overrule indictments, he for would the turned de whom seals and said u know the of the cuLrges against you? “We do,” came in Then one by present or tiers ao ¥¢ AITALEYCQ In "Geatliewmen, nalure & heavy chorus men ials from and president the indicted one + wining forwner union offic sections of the country, M. Ryan, luternational Association Structural lronworkers, names were by responded: “Not any headed Frank of the Bridge Brose the « gu by LF and as their called k ie] anda Ly Altarke made the tin and angles Charging aiding and abet and John J trans portation on passenger with being principals with Me id the Namaras in the i} acts and with having conspir from many the indictments were n fendants with £00 McM up ae Ortie } James } tut K anigal Mchamara in the dynamite trains, Manigal = Mc¢ legal ¥ to violate th taiules | E ed rohibiting such transportation That run gf } the statute of limitations had the offense of conspiracy did it had explosives carried on were the two princh for the de Patrick Bail, Harding, against alieged and that the indictment er violation of law because the defendants kages of as not not get out pa alleged WAR mislabeled they were toc have PARssenEer (ra’ns, pal contentions of counsel Elijah Coline and O'Donnell, of Chicago, Walter of Muncie, Ind. and W. N of fense, this city has been beset with storms. It is un tor of a publication 2.000 Battle. Italians Lost in Eleven. Hour the of Edhem Pasha, in the district Consgtantinopie Turkish commander Ministry success at He gave driven out treated which lasted 11 hours the Italian an important Tobruk that the Italians were of their positions and re to their ships after a battle Edhem Pasha casualties at ment of Agriculture, Dr. Wiley has a terror to food adulterators. So great that, when recently President Taft was asked to depose him for in- subordination, thousands of petitions poured into the White House from all his services be retained at all cost Dr. any and Wiley was appointed chief ana to accept the post. FIRE DESTROYS CHURCH. Atlantic City Episcopalians Loge Their Beautiful Edifice. Atlantie City, N. J -8t James’ Protestant Episcopal Church, on Pa cific avenue in this city, was burned Friday. The church had been pre pared for confirmation services. Bish. t& Scarborough, of the New Jersey diocese, was in the rectory at the time and alded in saving some of the church property. The loss is est) mated at $60 000, The Turkish losses were also very heavy, including many Arab women who were carrying supplies of am- munition to the Turkish troops in the MISTRIAL IN BATHTUB CASE. Jury Seven For Acquittal and Five For Conviction. Detroit, Mich ~The jury which has been trying the case of the govern: ment against the so-called Bathtub Trust in the Federal court here failed to reach an agreement and was dis charged by Judge Angell. The jury was reported to have stood seven for acquittal and five for conviction. JEFFERSON HIGHWAY, Bill Provides For One Fram Char fcttesville To Monticello, Washington A hundred thousand dollar roadway and memorial arch for the home of Thomas Jefferson is pro posed in a bill introduced in the House by Representative Flood, of Virginia Mr. Flood wants $60,000 appropriated to buiid a highway from Main street Charlottesville, Va., to Monticello, A the gate to Monticello he would have erected an wehway to cost $50,000 KING OF ITALY ESCAPES BULLETS Anarchist Fires Several Shots at Him in Carriage. OFFICER OF GUARD WOUNDED o— King On His Way To the Pantheon To Memorial Services For the Late King Humbert, Who Was Assassinated. attempt to as Emmanuel of Anarchist in chose Rome. ~ | sassinate aly ! Rome A dastardly King Victor Was made an The would-be regic for his attempt the anniversary of the birthday of the late King Humbert, the father of the King, who died the gesasein’s blow 1800 King Victor enough to from a num & very short of his who was by ge present victim of an at Menza on 9, Emmanuel $ he sYalver July fortunate fired at were several in Was CECA De shots him They were aimed from The bodyguard, however imediate vicinity of the King, was dangerously The King. in Helena, was going the Pantheon, to take part ter anc distance commander wounded with the Queen palace to in the an memorial service ir honor of the King The car was followed COmpany from nual inte Humbert royal and by of Culraseiers P riage preceded an escort At the was sul station the anarchist jected to a keen interrogators that his name Antonio at he was 21 years of sage and A stone He de an "individualist he had made as 2 protest against : FrEanization of lice He said Dialba that h Was th # Was mason scribed Bb anarchist the ingel! as and said th King's life atterupt on GLASS WORKERS GET BIG RAISE. Per Cent. Branches. the Increase Of 35 in All Pittsburgh Average sand hand window giges workmen emploved in throughout Kansas, Indiana. nsyivania and W 3 West Virginia received notice that their Five factories Ohio. Pen Vednesday wages will 35 per cent, branches of dustry being affected This decirion was reached at a con- between the wage of National Window ers and a committee representing the manufacturers, held in Cleveland, March 6 and It will remain in ef- fect until May 29 when another ad justment ir expected all ihe in ference commitiee the Glass Work NO VISIT TO GERMANY, Why King George Will Take No Trips To Foreiges Courts. London King foreign for this All the projected vigites of George and Queen Mary to courts have been abandoned year. The change in the : to the coal sirike, but in all probability {and the possibility of the occurrence | of unpleasant incidents and Queen appeared in Berlin have more to do with it than the labor trouble in the British Isles Boy Scalded To Death, Amherst, O-—Mre. Angelo Miagali- otta, 32, was arrested nere on an afi. davit sworn to by Mre Anthony Caltalfe, Mrs. Caltalfe charges that the two-year-old boy, Philip, was killed by being thrown into a kettle of scalding water by Mrs. Miragliotta on Feliru- ary 28. Mrs. Miragliotta is in the county jali at Elyria MINER BLOWN TO PIECES. He Put Electric Batteries and Ex. plosives In Same Bag. Pittsburgh, Pa.-—John Gaddis, a miner, was blown to pieces in a peculiar accident at New Derry, Pa., near here. When he quit work Gad. {is put his electric batteries and ex- plosives used in blasting coal in a bag and swung it over his shouider. The atteries, jarring together, short eir. euited, causing a spark, which ignited hie explosives. BANDITS FOILED BY MESSENGER and Forced Engineer To Bring It To a Stop in a Lonely Btr..ch Cf Prairie. Ban Antonio, Texas —Employing the gimplest sort of ruse, a Wells Fargo Express messenger, with perve ' aplenty, who knew how to deliver a swift, terrible blow, bery of a Southern Pacifie train killing two of the highwaymen by The | the eastern edge of the country of Texes. For through the lope stretches of prairie only scattered ranch | houses relieve the landscape's monotony, The point where , train, No. 9, westbound, was halted is several miles east of Banderson, in Terrel county David A. Trousdale, An express messenger, recently pro moted to his run from the San An- tonio offices of the express company, prevented the robbery. One of the robbers who held up Trousdale at the point of a rifle in a corner was ran | sacking the express car “I'm not going to scrap with | all” remarked Trousdale as he | versed with the bandit “I'm getting fighting wages.” “Oh, all right,” replied “then you fellows will have to us get this stuff across the Grande.” “Why don’t you pick up that pack age?” casually inquired Trousdale, as he kicked at a small box on the floor of the car. “It's worth more than al the stuff you've got The robber stooped, the ruse, to pick up the package Trousdale grasped a heavy mallet and struck. The bandit received the blow full on the head. He over dead There was no alarming outery Trousdale picked up the dead ber's gun waited Meanwhile dite had been working the ahead. When he completed his he hurried back to the express car “Frank, There was no answer The robber swung himself aboard the car. As his form loomed in the doorway the express messenger fired The bandit the ground dead. The bodies of the robbers were put into a baggage car and the train proceeded The bandits boarded the after midnight ¢ engine they covered the with guns and ordered to proceed till they told him Ten miles west of Dryden they gave the signal for halt. The con ductor of the express alarmed by the frequent stops, sent & negro porter ahead inquire about the trouble The negro was promptly covered with a rifle. Then the conductor crept up to the engine. Immediately be took in the situation. Before the robbers could fire upon him he hastened back and down the track. Walking sev eral miles he stopped a freight train and wires to Sanderson robbers border | “Big miles rolling on Bend” you con- not the bandit, help Rio deceived by i fell rob and of the ban car job the second on he called tumbled to express at Dryden soon Bwing ing onto th driver, Erosh him to stop a fo gave the alarm over the Meanwhile were putting their plans for ransack express mail cars the Ing the and into execution The sheriff searching for a bind supposed near the holdup Near the point train was stopped tracks of Lorses were found leading to the border. It is presumed the robbers, had they succeeded, would have made for Mexico The of the bandits have no! They are Americans of NE the Terrell county member of been with the third to have posted scene horses where bodies been identified $16,100 FOR PAINTING. Vaughan Portrait Of Washington Brings Record Price. Philadelphia —The Gilbert Stuart bead Washington, known as the Vaughan portrait, the feature of the sale of the art collection of the Iate Joseph H. Harrison, Jr, was sold at auction here to Thomas B. Clarke, of New York, after a lively competition, for $16,100. This is a record price for the painting and brought the sale to a close, enough money being realized to pay the bequests in the will of Mrs Sarah Harrison, whose executors con ducted the sale. It was announced that the remainder of the collection, including the portraite of Washing. ton and Franklin by Rembrandt Peale, will be presented to the Pemusylvania Academy of Fine Arts of MAINE WRECY 5 “AT REST" Ceremony Attends Burial of Historic Hull AN IMPRESSIVE SCENE “Dynamite Acts As the Maine's Last Pllot—Procession To Bea a Silent One, No Salutes Johnny" Being Fired By Convoy. Havana Under lowering skies and nats afier 14 nar nor, in & heavy tumbling sea the old Maine, resurrected years’ burial in Havana plunged, with her colors fiving, to her 600 the sapphire waters of the Gulf sinking of the hulk was precisely as planned, marking the end of the great work begun more half ago impressive ceremonies everlasting rest fathoms deep in The carried out than a year and a After morning, in the which ended with the formal the Mavor bodies of Brig.- Engi represen transfer of of of the the custody by Cardenas heroic Julio H pe, 1 dead de Bixby, chief of B.A, as the tative of the United States, the coffins ihe Havana, to Ww neer Lor Gen the were taken aboard the armored cruiser North posited pletely floral tri composed were fired by the batteries of Cabanas fortress ships Carolina, where they deck were oe tha 0 ‘ on covered by a jarter Com great mound of butes under a guard of honor, ¥ 1 marines Mir North Care oO the scout cruiser Birmingham and until td cleared the harbor The Voyage Seaward. oclock Soon after 2 aboard the navy tug of were the ster, Arthur XN Beaupre, and the staff of the legatic Osceola, which United States Min rai William Patrick con Brigadier Gene M. Black, Lieut. -Cok and Major Harley gltituting H the Maine commission, glern wreck, and ng tugs attac either end of the bulkhead, which then part the purpose of steadyin her Her Tighe pas ed lines to the end of the wedge shaped Two flank gliaried seawnro hed lines to of the hulk, for 1S LE became the after ana slecr decks and ensign where the BE covered deep w» th fiow ers palms and Americar fioating the mainyg Maine put a Freat from the jury mast ast formerly stood io sea on her last voy John O'Brien, ekip sleamers RCLIDg Aw the squadron 3 te Johnns ilibustering Friends » 149 pilot wreck passed the American the crews manned the rails the the riet rierdeck marines presented coated bandsmen played th minutes Passing out « were fired, the Maine at half aif north wat Armes, the qi SCR on ia anther & requien ¢ national wile guns boomed yf the harbor no salutes flotilla, headed the HER vas almost } t proceeding in silence with £ mast Th OUrse keep the wreck Beas aue head-on to and i1hus avoid the danger of falling into the trough at § o'clock the oper O'Brien jum which steamed Then all fixed on Precisely crew In threw end IE a Jittle eves in the wreck lining for the wash stantly the valves Captain ped aboard a aslongside, distance away great fleet were the crews the rails. All was silence b of the heavy seas For change was visible in the trim of the great, rust) battered hulk, which pitched heavily as the huge rollers struck her. Then ghe was seen to sinking at the bulkhead end. Soon the waves began to wash her deck. As she re mained pitching and wallowing each moment, settling deeper and deeper, the stern was seen fo rise. In a few geconds the hulk was almost vertical showing first the propellers and then the full keel. The next moment there was a flash of blue as the great en- sign flying from the mast riruck the waves and disappeared Simultane the of warships the 1s fen minutes no be over a Baker For Damages. New York ! Supreme Court by Mrs. Ida Seligman, | She has sued a local bread company ! for injuries that she claims resulted {from her discovery. Mrs Seligman says that the sight aches. A ——— WAR IN THE AIR. The European Situation Reaching An Acute Crisis. London. The Daily Telegraph, in a paragraph under the head of “The Peace of Rurope,” says: “In diplo | matie eircles the European situation | is giving rise to considerable anxiety (It is understood there is the possi { bility that an acute crisis already is {engaging the attention of more thar j one of the great powers, with incredible plunged down, pressure, and velocity the Maine on the surface of the sea. Precisely 20 minutes elapsed frem the opening of the valves until the Hold-Up On Tenement Roof. New York —Guiesseppe Dulaca, ap Italian diamond merchant, was held robbery the man was badly beaten up Four men were involved in the hold up, and ‘one of them has been cap tured. Strikers Fight Police. Boston.—-The scene of the serious textile strike trouble In Massachusetis shifted from Lawrence to Barre Ip n clash between strikers and the police and deputies three policeman were shot, two others injured with stones and a score or more of the strikers were clubbed so that It was necessary to call physicians to attend them Cnly me arrest was made. Botweer 16 and 20 shots were fwed Women trikers were particularly bitter, urg ag the men on in thelr attack.