eli A A YS TE WT A Pension Burlesque. ! I sion policy is not approved ot by some : who assisted in electing Harrison : The Ohio Republicans in their plat- form have declared in favor of granting a pension to every honorably-discharg- ed Union soldier and sailor in the War of the Rebellion, and this is a part of their declaration of principles, to which | objection will probably be made by many good Republicans. Its meaning is that every-body who served in the Union ranks, no matter whether he ever received a scratch or a hurtin the war, and no matter how little he may need the bounty of the government, shall havea pension. To carry out such a proposition as this would be to exceed anything in the way of giving pensions that has ever been done or even contemplated by any other govern- ment in the history of the world. [It is well known that the present Pension | Commissioner i? in favor of issuing a i t Ld t t pension to everybody who has ever had | e any connection, however slight, with | ¢ the Union Army in the War of the Rebellion and of raising to the highest figure possible the pensions of those who are now on the list. Instead of making an attempt to decrease these |! payments, his object is to make them |? as large as the condition of the Treas: | Y SY @ Hoyt came Kast, found Hoover's father to Colorado he encountered Simpson, his former partner whom he had robbed, The following from the Philadelphia [ and at first sight both opened fire on Evening Bulletin, one of the stanuchest Republican papers of that city, quite each other, the fracas resulting in the killing of Simpson. For this Hoover was arrested, tried and sent to the State clearly indicates that the Tanner pen | Penitentiary, at Canon City, for life. After serving ten years there he died ast month. ‘Besides the diagram where he had hid- den his treasure in Huntingdon county eleven years previously, Hoover left an autobiography and a will in which he bequeathed to Warden Canon City penitentiary, and to. his Hoyt, of the ywn father, should the latter be found, all his possessions, which consisted prin- cipally of his buried gold nuggets. Arn- :d with the necessary papers Warden n a remote part of Franklin county, and a week ago the two arrived in search of he buried treasure. Going to MeCon- wellstown they followed up the route aken ten years ago by James Hoover, and by careful inquiry located in a gen- eral way h the place where the gold was On Tuesday of last week they eached the house of Michael T. Bren- ridden. Ir { neman, and upon exhibiting to him the draft of the ground found to their joy hat their search wasabout to be reward- d, for Farmer Brenneman instantly re- ognized the draft as a diagram of his property. THE FARMER'S EYES BULGED OUT. The farmer's eyes were then opened o their fullest capacity when he learned rom the strangers the object of their sit. There, within a hundred yards ury and the generosity of the people There is apparently no undertaking which, in the judgment of Commissioner Tanner, is so laudable on the part of a government as the pen- of his home, where he had cooled his heated brow on ‘countless occasions be- neath its grateful shade, stood the white oak tree under whose protecting roots was hiddem a veritable mine of wealth. sioning its people, and the bigger its |. pension rolls the greater, in his opinion, are the proofs of its wealth and good- ness of heart. There is no deserving survivor of the Union Army who, if he stands in need of help by reason of the disabilities which he may have contract- ed in the service of his country, will not have the sympathy of the Republi- can party in asking for help from the |e government which he helped t& save. | t But when we are seriously told that |! this help ought to be extended to tens of thousands of men who are in no need of support, and who never thought of asking for it, it is time that a halt was called on the thoughtless zeal of those who assume to be friends of the soldiers. Such a policy would mean the expenditure of not less than $100;- 000,000 a year in addition to the dis- bursements which the government now makes, and it would be the fruitful par- ent of extravagance and jobbery. There is no just excuse for such a proposition. The Soldiers as a class are not asking for it, and the principles of the Republican party do ot encour- age the idea. It has been contended that no easier method could be devised of getting rid of the surpus in the Treas ury, and this is doubtless true. But there are more useful if not quite so easy methods of relieving ourselves of, this plethora of the national income. and they are to be found in the con: struction of a navy and in the fortifica- tions of our coasts. To squander it in pension money simply for the sake of getting rid of'it 1s a suggestion which is not only unrepublican in spirit, but un- 1 statesmanlike in practice. On the con- ¢ trary, the time has come when we should begin to think of drawing the line on pensions rather than in extend- ing them, and this fact will be recog- | nized by those soldiers who helieve that a pension should be a mark of honor, distinction end reward, and | not a gift showered indiscriminately upon all persons who ever wore the | e 8 t 8 e t 1 t Federal uniform. 1 ———————————— f A Buried Treasure Found in Hunting- don County. a Philadelphia Record of Saturday. Warden Hoyt, of the Colorado State Penitentiary, is in this city on his way home from a successful search after a hid- | t den fortune in Huntingdon county. He received the information of the buried treasure from a convict in the State pris- on at Canon City, Col., who had been sentenced to a life term for murder, and who died a few wecks ago. This convict was James Hoover, a Syell-known resi- | 1 dent of Franklin county twenty years AZO. In 1874 Hoover, to avenge a wrong done to hissister by a hysicigg of Frank- lin county, shou and killed him. Before he could be apprehended he fled, finally locating .t one of the numerous mining camps in Colorado. There he met a man named George Simpson, of Ohio, | and the two afterjoining fortunes, finally | i struck it rich. When the two had amas- sed a considerable fortune in gold dust and nuggets Simpson fell ill, and Hoov- || er decamped withall their wealth. Fear- ing to remain longer in that country | he decided to come East again and brave | i the chances of being arrested tor the murder. GOLD NUGGETS The wealth he brought with him con- sisted partly of gold nuggets, valued at $10,000, tied in a canvas bag. Hoover found his parents had moved from Frank- lin couuty to McConnellstown, Hun- tingdon county, and he went in search of them, but his search proved unavail- |! ing, and he left McConnellstown and | t started in the direction of Alexandria, ten miles distant. When half this dis- tance had been covered loover became very weary with the weight of his trea- sure and stopping by the wayside on the farm of Michael T. Brenneman, he hid bis gold nnggets beneath the roots of a white ouk tree. He thenmade a careful draft of the surrounding country, enter- ing into the minutest details, and after familiarizing himself with the surround- ings resumed his journey. He stopped. at the adjoining farm-house of George Miller, where he remained all night and obtained the names of the owners of the near-lyingsifarms which were included in his diagram of the locality where he had secreted his treasure, thus perfecting his description of the place. HOOVER'S SECOND MURDER. Hoover's fruitless search for his parents continued until the latter part of the year (1878) .when he returned to Colo- rado without taking wie. t 8 } TIED UP IN A Bag. |] ¢ £ t; mer who entertained James Hoover over night is dead, but his widow remember- ed distinctly the circumstances of the mysterious stranger's brief visit of elev- en years ago, and hissearching inquiries ofpersons and places. aa swollen answer to a note in he wanted her to return a gold ring and breastpin &s he was going out west. She found him half a square from and within grabbed her by the arm with his one arm and sought to drag her away, saying he struggled to fence. the eye, and knocked her almost sense- i out again. hausted and at the villain’s mercy. “Why,” said the aggrieved old farmer, ‘when they told me this it fetched a kind of fizzle over me when I remember- d that 1 need only tohave stretched my hand out to gaina fortune!” And the old man’s bewilderment was still notice- able as he told his story. Leaving Mr Brenneman, as he says, tupefied by their startling recital, War- den Hoyt and the old man Hoover repair- d to the foot of the white oak tree along he roadside, and there beneath its over- apping roots, but little covered by the soil, they unearthed the golden treasure which eleven years before James Hoover, he fugitive, had hidden. The will, the diagram and the autobigraphy were all hown to Mr. Brenneman, and bore vidence of their genuineness and legali- y. George Miller, the neighboring far- The value of he recovered treasure is gotten from the estimate given of it in James Hoover's will, which places it at about $10,000. A Fiend’s Brutality. A Labenon Woman Dragged for Two Days Through the Woods aiid Rescued at the Mouth of her Mother's Revol- ver i Lapaxon, Pa., July 7.—The abduc- ion of Lillie Johnson, the 20-year daugh- ter of Fruit Dealer John Stains, has created an immense sensation here. Af- er a search for two days and- nights, participated in by several hundred men, 1eaded by the girls father and the police, he young woman was found late last nightand taken from her captor, Thomas Hotfinan, her cousin, at the point of a revolver. Hotfman escaped. The young voman was found in the house of Hotf- man’s brother at Mount Lebanon. Plucky Mrs Stains declared that she vas prepared to kill her child’s abductor should