oy A PAPER DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF SNOW SHOE AND SNOW SHOE TOWNSHIP. VOL. L MOSHANNON AND SNOW SHOE, PA. WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1910. NO. 10. LOCAL NEWS Snow Shoe and Vicinity. L. C. Bullock has installed his new lighting system in J. A. Kelly's bar- ber shop and pool room. Prof. B. J. Bowers has opened a night school and many young men, who are employed during the day, are taking advantage of this op- portunity. Mr. F. L. Shope, our up-to-date paper- hanger and plumber, departed for Karthaus, where he has contracts for putting in a water plant and several bath rooms. : : The new brick dwelling which is be- ing erected by Chambers & Uzzell, on Olive street, is being pushed along as rapidly as the conditions will permit. The wall is now completed and the work on the upper structure will com- mence immediately. Your attention is called to the new ad of A. F. Smith who is prepared to do all kinds of picture framing. Here now is a chance to have those pictures framed that have been on ‘your hands so long. Last Sunday morning Messrs. Thompson and Davidson, headed by the old guide Edwin, started out on a tramp to = village of Dix Run. They expected to make the trip in about three hours, but they all got lost, even the old guide, and after wandering around in the jungles for several hours, and being nearly scared to death by wild animals, they finally found their way out of the wilderness. The old guide was kept busy with his long range air rifle, keeping the wild beasts away. Bobby said he thought once they were coming to a settle- ment, for he heard a church bell and they all started to run in that direc- tion only to find that it was a cow with a bell on, pasturing on the moun- tain side. They arrived at their des- tination at Sunset tired out and foot- sore, but happy. Edwin says the next time he goes to Dix Run it will be with “Pop.” A very important business change took place this week when T. B. Bud- | #nger purchased from the Clarence Supply Company their full stock of general merchandise at Clarence, and will take charge of same on or about ‘May 15. The meat market owned and operated by T. B. Budinger has also been sold to Chambers and Uz- zell, which will be operated in con- nection with the one they already have at Clarence. Messrs, Shaw and Wilson have re- ceived a pass from the State Highway Commission which will enable them to make more frequent trips to the suburban town of Clarence. Information has been made before Squire Mussed of Bellefonte, against Reuben and Ralph Etters for setting fire to some valuable timberland in Burnside township belonging to Kelly and Redding of Snow Shoe. About 7060 or 800 acres were burned. They will be given a hearing in the near future. Don’t forget the Times when any- thing of public interest occurs in your neighborhood. We want all the big and little things. CRAZED BY COMET Farmer Anticipates End of World by Repudiating Bills. Massillon, O.—Driven insane by the ear that the world will be destroyed y Halley’s comet, Fred Bowers, 2a rmer, is being held at the police sta- ion here pending the arrival of an or- i committing him to the State asy- um. Immediate cause of Bowers being eld is his refusal to pay for large uantities of merchandise which he urchased. He declared that it was 1seless to pay for them, for in 15 ays the world would be consumed by re. Bowers declares that he has a mission from God to warn men of the mpproaching end of the earth. If a man w ho none is a bachelor it’: 1} recently MINE EXPLOSION COSTS MANY LIES Forty-five Whites and 135 Negroes Entombed in Alabama Mine. FLAMES SHOT UP 200 FEET Mail Carrier 30 Feet From the Slope Thrown Into River and Killed— McArdle’s Brother a Victim. ‘Birmingham, Ala.—Forty-five white and 135 negro miners are entombed in No. 3 coal mine at Palos, Ala., as the result of an explosion. lieved that all are dead. The mines are-owned by the Pelos Coal and Coke Company of Birmingham. Two bodies were found. } ; The flames from the explosion shot up 200 feet into the air and the shock was felt for miles. Stones were hurled several hundred feet from the mouth of the mine. Rocks from the roof caved in and made access diffi: cult. The fan machinery was damag: ad, but air is pumped into the mine in hopes that some of the men are still alive. ~ Relief Crew Rushed to Scene. Residents of Palos, which is 40 miles west of Birmingham, began at mce to do what they could, but relief work was mot started in earnest un- lil a special train from Birmingham reached Palos late in the day. This special train carried State Mine In- spector James Hillhouse, J. J. Rut- ledge, government expert in charge of the geological station at Knoxville, Tenn., who was in the district inves- | tigating the recent disaster at Mulga; sight physicians and surgeons, four indertakers and a number of special helpers. The hospital relief commis- sioner of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company was also taken. This car contained helmets and all other necessary paraphernalia for en- tering gaseous mines. The first rescuers who went into the mine after the explosion were overcome by fire damp and had to be carried out. Mr. Rutledge was among the first to enter. After working his way 1,400 feet down the slope, he found the second right entry caved in. The two bodies recovered were in the main slope. Mail Carrier Blown Into River. James Gousby, a mail carrier, was caught by the explosion 30 feet from the mouth of the slope and his body | was hurled into the Warrior river. He | was walking along the railroad track and was directly in front of the mine’s mouth when the explosion occurred. [t was judged from this that the farce of the explosion was such that none of the men in the Interior could re- main alive. ~ McArdie’s Brother Killed. Fort Wayne, Ind.—President P. J. McArdle of the Amalgamated Associa- tion of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers now in convention received a telegram stating that his brother had been kill- ed in the mine explosion in Maton He left for the south the same day. THE REAL WHITE DEATH Pneumonia Claims 1,596, Consumption 794 in February. Harrisburg,” Pa.—Causes of death in Pennsylvania during the month of FonusT: as reported by the bureau bf vital statistics of the state depart- front of health, show pneumonia far in the lead with tuberculosis much re: duced. The total number of deaths luring February from all causes was 10,079, distributed in part as follows: Myphoid fever, 124; scarlet fever, 117; Diphtheria, 178; measles, 168; tuber culosis of the lungs, 794; tuberculosis pf other organs, 116; pneumonia, 1,596; suicide, 56; railway injuries, 113; all other diseases, 4,350. The total num! ber of births for February was 16,385: Boy Firebug Confesses. Dubuque, Ta.—Walter Smith, 24 rears old, confessed, according to the police, to setting fire twice to the Grand Opera House, during a perform: ince. The police are trying to solve ‘he origin of the fires, which recently festroyed the Bijou theater and part »f the Standard Lumber Company plant, causing $150,000 damage. Would Stop Sale of Alcohcd. Richmond, Va.—The American Phar- Imaceutical Association placed itself on record as advocating the abolition of alcohol as a commodity of sale in all American drug stores and earnestly urged the elimination of all traffic in what is termed habit-forming drugs, as harmful to public morals and det- rimental to the best interest of the American people. It is be- i feo. BIG FIGHT FOR LAND State Begins Action to Escheat Hold: ings of Harmonite Society. The State of Pennsylvania, through Attorney General M. Hampton Todd, began quo warranto proceedings in the Beaver county courts to escheat the vast property and former holdings of the now defunct Harmony society, amounting to, it is believed by the at- torneys and others interested in the suit, at a minimum figure of $3,000,000, with a possibility of going far beyond that sum. This action is the first of its kind brought by the state against the Harmony society or any celibate society. Its determination will set a precedent for' similar actions should Ens state be successful in recovering he assets of the society, and should [Pennsylvania win in the final action; jwhich will probably : be before the nited States Supreme Court, John Si Duss, one of the parties defendant, being a resident of Florida, it will af- It s estimated that more than $200,000, | oy similar societies in all states. 00 is owned by these organizations. The Commonwealth was represented y Attorney General M. Hampton odd, J. Frank Reed of Beaver, Henry _ Siebeneck of Seymour, Patterson & iebeneck, and Henry G. Wasson of the Allegheny ‘bar. Messers. Reed and Wasson presented the action be: ore Judge Richard F. Holt of Beaver county and the court signed the writ Pn for and directed the sheriff of eaver county to personally serve the parties as defendants. PRESIDENT AT ST. LOUIS Defends His Choice of Justice: of Supreme Court. St. Louis—President Taft’s five-day. trip to the Middle West ended Wed- pesday and he left for Washington. It remained for St. Louis to give Mr. Taft the heartiest demonstration of his present journey. The city was gaily decorated and there were cheer- ing throngs wherever the president went. Several times his automobile was stopped to receive bouquets of flowers. These Mr. Taft later sent to St. Luke’s hospital and the Home for Incurables. The apparent warmth of reception seemed to affect the president, and when, at the luncheon of the Business Men's league, President Walker Hill praised him amid deafening applause for his appointments of Lurton and Hughes to the Supreme Court bench, Mr. Taft launched into a vigorous speech, in which he paid his respects to Bryan for his reported criticism of Rovernor Hughes, and decried the :ant of the demagogue” and the “dis- position of public journals” to make just charges against men in pyplid life. NINETY YEARS MARRIED Colorado Husband Aged 110, His Wife 107. Florence, Col.—Census returns of this place include a pair of remarka- le schedules in the case of Francisco | fisgor and his wife, Rafael, who allege o be 110 and 107 years old, respec- tively, and to have been married 90 years. According to the information given | by their granddaughter, Mrs. Julia ontoye, with whom they live, Espor, who is of French parentage, was born in what is now New Mexico in 1800 and his wife was born in Taos, Mex, in 1803. They were married in Santa fle in 1820. One son, the survivor of 10 children, still lives in New Mex- He is 85 years of age. $12,000,000 FOR WORKMEN i Steel Corporation Establishes Addi- ; ditional Fund for Pensions. Chairman Elbert H. Gary of the nited States Steel Corporation, an- pounced in New York that the con- ern had established a fund of $8,000, 00 for pension purposes which will be onsolidated with the fund of $4,000, 00 set aside by Andrew Carnegie for mployes of the Carnegie Steel Com- any, the combined amount of $12,- 00,000 to be known as “The United tates Steel and Carnegie Pension Fund.” ; WAGES INCREASED Compromise on Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton Railroad. . Cincinnati—A new working agree iment, calling for an increase in wages and better working conditions, was signed by the management of the Cin- cinnati, Hamilton & Dayton railroad pnd the members of the Brotherhood of Railroad Firemen and Enginemen employed on the road. The agreement is a compromise an the demands originally asked for aud refused. FALRDA BILL STRIKES SMAGS IN CONGRESS Senate Strikes Out § Out Section Which Would Have Permitted Mergers. drnn—— FINAL OUTCOME IS UNCERTAIN Dismantling Process on Administra- : tion Bill in Both Houses of Congress. : Washington—The dismantling of the administration railroad bill proceeded is both houses of congress Tuesday. . Section 7—the traffic agreement provision—was eliminated by ' both senate and house; the senate struck out also section 12, which would have permitted any railroad owning 50 per ‘cent of another road to absorb it al- together, The section prohibiting a railroad to charge a higher rate for a short than for a long haul was adopt- od by the house is the form reported by the committee on interstate com- ‘merce, but with an additional provi- lsion for an investigation and report to congress by the interstate commerce lcommission of the facts relative to the long and short haul question. There is no section corresponding to ‘this in the bill as it is pending in the senate; but an amendment offered by Senator Heyburn to modify the exist- ing law to similar effect precipitated an extended debate which was still in progress when the senate adjourn- ed. Fate of Bills Unknown. Strictly speaking, each house was acting upon a separate bill—the senate in the ‘senate bill introduced by Sena- tor Elkins; the house in the house bill introduced by Representative Town- end—but the bills at the outset were identical; though they were made dif- ferent in various respects by the com- mittees which reported them. Each version of the bill has yet to be pass- ed in its own house and then will ave to undergo the tender mercies of the other. Whether either will ever emerge from the final stage of joint conference is a thing nobody is pre- pared just now to prophesy. . Immediately after the bill was tak- en up in the senate Mr. Elkins, in charge of the bill, proposed to lay on the table the Cummins amendment re- quiring the approval of all agreements by the interstate commerce commis- sion in advance of their taking effect. But Mr. Cummins saved the trouble of taking a vote by voluntarily taking his amendment out of the running. The Democrats had agreed to, vote against. the Cummins provision in considera- tion of the adoption of the Clay amendment striking out the entire sec- tion. BIG GOLD SUPPLY MAKES HIGH PRICES State Commission of Massachusetts Absolves Tariff and Trusts. Boston—A marked increase in the orld’s gold supply and extravagances nd waste, public and private, are the rincipal reasons given for the high cost of living by a special state com- ission which has been investigating the subject for eight weeks. The increased gold supply is given s the primary cause and ‘the enor- mous waste of income in the United States, through unconscious expendi- kures for war and national armament, land through multiple forms of extrav- lagance, both public and private, is ‘classed as a contributing factor. 500,000 United States Cook Books. A tentative agreement on a half: million copy edition of “Uncle Sam’s Cook Book’’ was reached between the genate and house conferees, the latter headed by Congressman Cooper of Uniontown, Pa. His suggestion that his colleagues would want at least 1,000 copies each and that the senate mem: bers might want an equal number led to an allotment of 400,000 for tha members and delegates of the lower house and 100,000 for the senate and vice president. Rich Man Dies in Shanty. Minneapolis, Minn.—Levi M. Stew: art, said to be the richest man in Min- neapolis, died of inflammation of the lungs. Mr.. Stewart had been sick for more than a year. He held more real estate in Minneapolis than any other man and his estate is computed to be worth many millions. For many years he lived the life on an eccen- tric bachelor in a small wooden shan- ty, situated in th e heart of the city. LOCAL NEWS Moshannon and Vicinity. The dwelling of Luther Bickett, at the Summit, has recently received a new coat of paint which is surely a good improvement, and speaks well for the owner of the property. The birthday surprise party At Mrs. Cassie Lucas’ on last Thursday even- ing was a complete surprise to Mrs. Lucas, in whose honor it was given, and a very delightful time participat- ed in by all present. About eight of the friends of the honored one took part in the pleasures of the evening and departed with wishes for many such happy reunions. “A quiet wedding took place at the home of Mrs. Lucy Cramer on Sunday May 1, when her daughter, Clemen- tine, was married to Mr. Bruce Culver, of this place. The ceremony was per- formed by Rev. R. F. Ruch, amidst a number of dear friends and rela- tives of the happy couple. Many useful presents were received and good wishes for a happy journey through life. : The bakery wagon of A. Thompson & Sons of Snow Shoe, made its initial trip to our town this week, for this Season. The census enumerator for this dis- trict, W. A. Sickel of Snow Shoe, was making his rounds this week in order to furnish Uncle Sam with information as to what the people are doing. Many new subscriptions to The Times have been received during the past week, but still there are a few more to come in. Do not neglect to subscribe for your home paper and thus make the new enterprise inter- esting for us all. You can have a three, six or twelve month subsecrip- tion, as you like. The - terms are printed on the fourth page of each is- sue. The iron is being rapidly laid on the new branch railroad into the Lehigh mines near this place and the ship- ping of coal will begin in the very near future. The work on the tipple is be- gun and only a few days until all will be ready for business. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Lomison attend- ed the funeral of Mrs. Anna Lomison, wife of Howard Lomison of Montgom- ery, on Friday last. Mrs. Lomison was Miss May Lomison’s mother, who! will be remembered by many of her friends in this vicinity. NOTICE! Your subscription for The Times is wanted, and you surely want The Times. It is not possible to call on each individual personally, therefore, send your name direct to the publish- er. State clearly the length of time you wish your subscription to run, and write name and address very plainly. A Post Office Money Order is the most satisfactory way to remit. Other ways at your own risk. WILL RAISE THE MAINE Both Branches of Congress Vote Ap- propriation for Purpcse. . Washington—After 12 years the ill- fated battleship Maine is to be remov- ed from the Havana harbor and the bodies which went down with the ves- sel will be interred in the National cemetery at Arlington. A bill pro- viding for such removal and burial has passed both houses. ~ The bill directs the raising of the vessel by the secretary of war and the board of engineers with “all conven- ient speed.”” The bodies in the ship are to be buried in Arlington and the mast lifted above their graves as a monument. ; rast of Bender Family. . Rio Vista, Cal--Kate Bender, last of the notorious family of Kansas 1aur- erers, is dead here, according to a statement made by John Colling, a resident of this place. The woman was found dead in a resort she con: ducted. Collins, who was her friend, said she revealed her identity to him several years ago, exacting a promise that he should not tell anybody until after her death, : ¥ adr ; «