Part 2. MAGAZINE SECTION. BELLEFONTE, PA. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1905. he Centre temo Farm Notes, Choice Fiction, Current Topics. rat. THE FRUITS OF PEACE. JAPAN TO TURN HER ATTENTION TO ARTS AND INDUSTRIES. Wonderful Performances Following Our Civil War When a Million Men Returned to Work to be Repeated by Japan. The great armies of Japan are about to be sent back to the farm, the work- | shop and the marts of trade, HE gan nation that has refused its knee In worship at the foot of is about to exemplify that) prophesy of Isaiah perhaps more fully than has any nation claiming to be guided by the Christian faith. “They shall beat their sw ploughshares, and their rs inio pruning hooks; nation shall not lift u) sword against n, neither shall they learn war any more.” Such were the words of the prophet, spoken during the very period of which tradition « the greatness the Japanese nation. “Militant Japan passes,” clares Baron Kan the representative in the Ui “and industrial Japan tal with the coming of { Within a sl », probal tober when the linge of 1! Japanese | n . with yellow | at the coming of the frost, the scroll that perp par story bear a | ment of that army of J: 1 I's that has » 4 power | by the wi The | to bow CT'oss rds into &p hoes of now M ited St s its pla "w Iv iy rare $i zs} wit will | narrat O gral 8) - 3 oy rid at ! | | AS so0n ¢ e i nese wernn | can mal that million through the invoke the s: for peace in ti res Army of the Repu tal at the close oP Han War. Promise of a Great Military-Peace| The reading Beview. The Japanese, evi the best that exi and with sufficient for improvement they imitate, 1 provide one specta : tion from ever been witn has carried which ha tary powers of the worl marching throug! amid the plaudit has made sacrifi the warriors on their Russian ant feat and humiliation, This plan has been adopted In a ten- tative way by the Jap Govern- ment, and is likely to be carried out, unless the riotous acts of the people who have been disappointed by what they regard as inadequate compensa- eve 8 been the A fied 1 Ye met dee Wy i nese y > | will make the soil fruitful to a degree in Oc-| " | Godd Vii Capi- | military power is to be dishanded and the soldiers are to go to their homes, Return to the Factory and the Farm. The little men who never turned aside in making assaults upon the en ety are to return to the factory, to form with deft fingers those wonder{ul art treasures that are the pride of cul tured homes the world over, to devote their genius to the combination of col ors with effects that cause Western ar | tists to admire, but which they cannot The little patient men will go tollsome effort, { equal, to thelr” farms and, by that excites wonder in those accus- med to the broad acres of America. The tactful merchants, ever polite, but able of sharp practice withal, are nense the wares that come from m and the workshops of Japan to all the nations of the earth, The Japanese have from the first Jaimed that their war with Russia has en for the maintenance of their na pal integrity. Baron Kancko him olf disclahwed the charge a year and a f ago that the Japanese have been t upon military glory and that their I would fire thelr ambition and ym forward to greater congue ern nations from whom they the modern arts of war. le uts the idea that the Japanese ry allies of Chit » Western world. r can fight, the Japanese, ¢, are peace loviong, and | d of the nation is toward nent. are to prove to the world l have not been are to “beat thel the Fare § 4 sis rations urse to war ot to are send Cause They s to The Hague to woo the) Peace, Oss of Last War Loan Unexpended, s with which the Japan- rn to tix ally notable be an of $150,000.xx) ado not The nat y end the war, » f ng. The ma ried up to a conditi tic fers was ready for tl t of Russia's plains, no matter ut those wi states n who have guided the he wonderful Island n od that Japan shall give to the rid an object lesson by having the called warrior nation, in the moment military great turn away om fiekds of carnage to pramote com lal greatness and the higher civili- zation, ars 3 dollar has m, when it 1s fully able ne fie of RL |} Lie J i w the cost: | ro tLe ¢ fortunes of ition have de w Po f its LOSS, “0 f1 n cs —— I ——— Eleelric Railroads in Ireland. The Introduction of light railways into Ireland has, it Is asserted, been productive of great benefit to thou tion for Japan as stipulated In the terms of peace, cause the Government, for] prudential reasons, to avoid such a demonstration when the great army is| within the capital But whet bs tary nation, chide war far the alone, takes scale that Ww Japan hope for, the army th raised Japan to the rank of a fir thi neg sands of farming cotliers, enabling better pric for their pigs, while being put! transport to market, 1 calling from vs iN, be as) utlay for permanent | w . We nt expepses would neces sarily be much less, MISS ALICE ROOSEVELT IN BLUE. Women like pink, but American men grefer blue, as a rule, In feminine ap- parel. Miss Alice Roosevelt estub- lished herself firmly in Washington last year by appearing in a number of pret tily made gowns of light blue, so that “Alice blue” has become*a feature of the department stores. Photographs which have come from the Orlent, how. ‘ever, show this Independent young lady in the red linen gown which she wore at the Chevy Chase horse show a year ago last May. It is made very simply and loosely without collar, the waist being embellished with applique clover leaves in white satin, having stems and outlines in black, Possibly thei Fill ——————————— RAILROAD LEGISLATION. SENATOR ELKINS BELIEVES IT WILL COME NEXT SUMMER. Is Willing to Co-operate With Pres ident Roosevelt in Passing Satis- factory Measures to Control the Railroads.~lle Outlines His Views, Senator Stephen B, Elkins, of West Virginia, In announcing the other day the call for a meeting in Washington on Nevmber 15, of the Senae Commit. tee on Interstate Commerce, sald that he was convinced that action on rail road rate legislation at the coming ses. glon of Cognress was inevitable, and that he would co-operate In passing a bill satisfactory to the President, “I thing I am justified,” sald Senator Elkins, “in stating that all the Re- publican, or majority members of the committee, have concluded that there must be rallroad legislation this win- | is | rent | that the railroad rate and privale car | | the purchase of raw materd ter. The President, I us emphatic as ever understand, ) in his jul de nst dealt is line problem 1 with cisively. 1 t} l no that some sort of biil will be passed. Quick Work by Committee. will 11 “wr I'he committee framing a | vidual memb opinions on waat 1 3 that will remain to be de on in. Thi not ; that Jd, as wl 's La some one p req re 1] when tl 4 be all I { ’ of ™ feren the Circuit judg approval in Wa convert the Pres SENATOR STEPHEN I. LLEINR “1 wonld have cach Clirenit onses which were rouge tion as having cut, and would have consisting of the judges, who could cor periods of the year peals, thelr appeal viewed only by the Sug the United States, TI pealed to Sen and : tives convers wdge try 1s atten 4 ot hor tors int “ practic road affairs as a most sensible, feasible and comprehensive plan” This anmonncement that Renator Fl kins has called a meeting for Novem ber 15 to frame a bill providing for railroad supervision and regulation by the government, that he is convineed that action by the coming Congress Is inevitable and that he will assist In passing a bill satisfactory to the Pres ident Is important and interesting Taken In Its fullest gignificance, it means that Mr. Elkin's committee will no longer stand In the way of enact. ment of a law that will enforce upon the rallroads the application of uni form rates to all classes of shippers and the discontiunance of secret re bates, It Is not doubtful that the mil way authorities will welcome an enactment that will enable them to say to all applicants for special favors that the law is binding upon them. It will be easier for them to conduct business on an even basis when they ean mint to the statute as forbidding them from clandestine arrangements. Thelr atti tude In regard to the private car lines, they disclalming any responsibility for the extortionte charges made by these lines, Is a wholesome sign. th idl Committee Has Been Hostile. Rightly or wrongly, the Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce bas been credited with being the chief obstacle to the enactment of legislation to restrict and correct the abuses of railway management, After the House of Representatives had passed the BEech-Townsend bill at the late sestlon It was carried Into that com: mittee and there held up until the adjournment of Congress. A vast amount of tesimomy was takn on the merits of the contention between the people and the transportation coms panies, and when the committee sus pended its meetings it was the general | pinos like red better than blue, impression that #t was firmly fixed In ita purpose to defeat any remedial doubt | | portant item, the average month's run | being 3.000.000 sheets, | 8, of course, has great need | the ca | pot. WORLD'S GREATEST PRINT SHOP, Tens of Millions of Documents Turn- ed Out by Uncle Sam. The Government Printing Office at | Washington, which has been prominently to notice lately through an brought | investigation of the award of contracts | for typesetting machines, is the largest establishment of its kind in the world, and nowhere can be found such an ex- tensive department in any printing ollics as that devoted to what is known as Job work, The amount of printing coming under the head of job work turned out by this office is one of the principal items at the establishment, Among the larger items of work per- formed by the job room may be found blanks, circulars, cards, letter and note heads and envelopes, 15,000,000 of the latter being required each month for the various Government departments, The “blank” department of the job room embraces an Infinite variety of forms, some being but a few square inches In size to others containing sev- eral square feet, For this branch over £550,000 is expended each month for al. Card board is large and im- necessarily a Congres for the Job room, for there the solons of Capitol III find ample facilities for the printing of the innumerable mailing 1! ranks for seeds and documents and | | a god In pain.” Having providently arranged that restraining hands shall Lold them back, these brilliant sons of Tennessee are struggling to grip cach other's throat, while the people of the Commonwealth Jook on aghast. The golden-domed Benator defend his seat by Joint but his friends fear the cun- ; master of the catgut muse. And Taylor's friends tie his hands, or they know the fiddle would “stand no show” against the viol that sings In epigram, » FIERCE WAR IN DIXIE, A Washington Paper Regales Its Readers with Accounts of Recent Herculean Struggles of Southern Pol ticians. From the Washington Post, Mid-August finds the pleasant land of Dixie In the happy and normal condition of political war. The treach erous thermometer, which In the] North has palpably crazed a large pro portion of the population, has benign ly registered a genial and warmth in the South, conducive to In- A Second Alamo. tellectual agility, incisi of tem From Texas comes the volee of the per, and healthful acidity of speech | Hon, Joseph W. Bailey, who in a I'rom the Potomae to the Rlo Grande from which politics was me reverberations of field and siege | rigorously excluded, thus referred artillery. “Sunburned ith Senatorial courtesy to certain of August weary,” drop their sickles and is colleagues: flock to town where peerless orators “Who drown and burn in perspiration and glas? peroration. All Dixie alive wilh oh with local Issues of overwhelming national | 7 Mr. Dick, importance, $ at rum The very dome of the Capitol 4 from Pe : back the ‘ecls ws of Virelnian Str corporations and cabals, There the florid Montague and the Rare old Kentucky, meanwhile, lis- natter-of-fact Martin are locked in a | fens to rare old Joe Blackburn, mak- str le that extend z the fizht of his life, So it goes of the Old inion. | throughout Dixie, that fair and happy igures of speech and land. HT writhe and grapple. 1 pahannock bolls, the Rapid | James runs aia Hampton Roads. glowing VOeNess peech CO ¢ r ddemen, of | w h is th A nice Di successor of Stephen A. old woman, who com- RIAs a8 the giow.-worm com- Who represents who didn't make gE a feed ot nusyivania? The ' o is the eagle, re flings | creature IRR 5 county Don Foe an Lory | BEGGARS IN INDIA. an bubbles, ) N | They Are Fast Disappearing.—Only About 5,000,000 Left. n ji New Government Print Shops | Old Structure now) The beggar nuisan n I the Dol the pr one *it iz also spread of nt weaker H es have of the people™ ft «vy than it was form of the various to the people I A : reason rs % unloose to believe g among the a down to the levels. This ev not confined 0 particular community or re- © ng ‘ 1 & . . nao ited] classes is filtering 1 4 OWwWer ii As eo one other routine work. tions from “th s the Capitol is called by the empl vees, are of a gen- eral or rout rider, » matter is electrotyped t ! plicate order be “str t off” at ort notice These “electro«” are Indexed, numbered i 1 In elaborate file cases, where they may be readily f 1 when addi- tional orders are received. Cuts and electrotypes which a t used in the period of four years a ir f 8 and Over 1) » to be re Rince into the new establishment but recen erected, the job room has taken businesslike alr, Improved fonts, a cap ty for tons of the vari of type used, immense gall stands for the reception of type, sing, lead and furniture ra improved cabinets for large type, small cuts and ’ v wn out o he melting estimated tly on Wr “iron” charge of the work In the operation of the larg in the country. Labor Saving Flectricity The Government Printing Office, all in all, is the model printing establish ment. Captain John 8B, 8. Sewell, the Engineer Corps, United States Army, was placed in charge of the work of Installation in the new build ing. army, he Is a student of the part elec tricity is destined to play in the his. tory of labor in the years to come, and 80 ably devised a full electrical equip- ment of this building, » 0 ET a eT Where the requisi- | Presidents adjusts her spectacles and ! > {er » lines, all ald those in| t and best equipped Job room | ary has been p Naged pod | | | While but a young officer of the] Each press, cut- | ting machine, stitcher, and every other | proper mechanical equirment of a printing office has its individual elec tric power supply. The furnaces for the meliing pots, too, have their heat generated by the subtle fluld. The size | of the Government Printing Office may | be realized when it is stated that the official guldes emnloved in the office! in making the rounds with visitors, oc cupy nearly three hours in the trip. measure, even such as might be oad orated from President Roosevelt's de terminaton to compel the railroads to obey the existing law and that if the statutes now written on the books are not sufficient, they must be reinforced to the desired potency: Senator Elkin's statement la a fore. runner of the settlement of the whole question In Congress next winter, Such an adjustment will be for the benefit of all parties conrerned--the railroads and the shipping Interests Immense harm has been done to worthy enterprises by rallroad dis. crimination against them. It seems now that the great transportation con. cerns will not hereafter be permitted to devote themselves to the creation of monopolies and the repression of competition. —— Good Bathing. Washington has a public bathing beach on the banks of the Potomac where during the heated weather thou. sands of dusty urchins, schoolboys, and other citizens disport themselves ln the ool of the evening. : 31 BF Hgion. It is as rampant among the { Mahometans as among the Hindoos. The “Sar Jadid” an ably conducted vernacular paper, published In upper India, dealing with questions of social reform among Mahometans, has iy | the attention of » necessity of a Our nee to the number of rs flash in the er surveillance was a ot yt ih 8 been rising every week, 1 in Aerct } the of criminal alllm some of the men for ligious have victed on charges of frand and clasps ber hands In convulsive apnre hension as #he stares at warr ' sons, It is a flerce and bloody fight, oy but out of it w 4 Senator, if there * ol Ws The Strife in Georgia. ntemporary by In good old Georgia the shears o Aue i zette that embattled oe : ; moon. Georgia come frantic at certain th governor rars und Cite records editor 1 any event, ed and Ix ; 3 op 4 . rst ’ 0 13 mmitted on the property LL a | Lid ’ ' ; y {f men and women whe misled by their religious ap- t ay al an re teachers r onger s ne « ned She I wa bap linots eflance and of sangu her capital w : plosions are of hourly oce column after column swe with double leads heads, It is a carnage « a bourgeois. Even the net diction- and war poets re at a ruinous premium, as th | To Cure Smoky Wicks. When lamp wicks smoke or refuse to burn properly they be soaked n vinegar and then dried thoroughly. The difference the light given will noticeable. Another homely suggestion is the use of salt to remove the ugly stain made by eggs on silver, It should be applied dry and rubbed on with a soft cloth. Ics Egyptian remains have ar g the prehistoric re- ient Gaul 1 rd shoul i and ] » 1 : : in Carmackian Tennessee. Over nut 5 Of 1 Tennessee aunreate n Hon Ww. Carmack are Incandescer \ » 1 ' i lon. Bob Taylor's violin istoric ind ains of an Pre } wen f “shricks like Lvery reader of this paper should have this book. Cut off the coupon and mail to us with $1.50. By ( Eugene P. Lyle, Jr. Published August 1st \ - 18TH Haskell’, THOUSAND : ALREADY All Bookstores, $1.5 Missourian The romantic adventures of John Dinwiddie Driscoll (nicknamed “The Storm Centre at the Court of Maximilian in Moxie ere his secret mission comes into conflict with that of the beautiful Jacqueline. The best romantic American novel of re cent years, oR : “Has what so few of its class possess, the elements of reality] sorouscht by infinite paine of detasl, verisimilitude, sugpestion,™ . «{t. Louis Republi, “A remarkable first book, of epic breadth, carvicd Lirough une swervingly, A brilliant story "2, Y. Times Caturday Review “There fs no more dramatic period in history, end the story bears every evidence of careful and painstaking study.” «NN. Y. Globe, DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. 133-137 East 16th St., New York. ~ . SL \ ~ & a RS CA pr ty
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers