rr TTT = Terms, $2.00 a Year, in Advance. "Bellefonte, Pa., Angust 16, 1889. EDITOR. P. GRAY MEEK, - inn, pesos re - Democratic County Ticket. For Associate Judge—THOS. F. RILEY. For Prothonotary—L. A. SCHAEFFER. For District Attorney—J. C. MEYER. For County Surveyor—GEO. D. JONSON. For Coronor—Dr. JAMES Y. NEFF. TIE, Committee, 1889. Democratic County wissen ses C M Bower ..Patrick Garrety Joseph W Gross .J W McCormick sents M I Gardner J Willis Weaver ...C W Hartman J D Ritter ..J H Riley Jackson Gorton ..L J Bing m Hepple Bellefonte, N. We... “ S. W. “ Howard Borough..... Milesburg Borough. Millheim Boroughs Philipsburg, 3 3 ty 3d W Unionville Boroug Burnside i“ Benner..... John Mechtley Boggs, N. P. Philip Confer ee W.P. ....T F Adams 5 E. H L Barnhart College .. Daniel Grove QUItin ooo cei inden sini nanan T S Delong John T McCormick Samuel Harpster jr .Geo. B Crawford ....J C Rossman J A Bowersox ..C A Weaver Wm Bailey ..C C Meyer Ferguson. EP <6 Ww. P Gregg, % Bu . Haines, E. P « W. P Halfmoon. Harris... d. nklin Dietz Jove. John Q Miles Liberty .D W Herring rion . A. Henderson Miles.. ..J J Gramley Patton ..D L Meek Hugh McCann PoE R C Wileox William Kerrin R J Haynes jr ...J N Brooks Wm T Hoover Aaron Fahr H McCauley Levi Reese WM. C. HEINLE, Chairmam. Democratic State Convention. The Democratic State Convention will as- semble in the Opera House, in the city of Har- risburg, on Wednesday, September 4, 1889, at 12 o'clock, M., for the purpose of nominating a candidate for the office of State Treasurer and transacting such other business as may prop- erly come before it. The rules of the Democratic party of Penn- sylvania provide that “the representation in the State Convention shall consist of represen- tative delegates, one for each 1,000 Democratic votes cast at the last gubernatorial election, or for a fraction of 1,000 such votes amounting to 500 or more, in the respective representative districts; provided that each representative district shall have at least one delegate.” ELLIOTT P. KISNER, Chairman Democratic State Committee, (Secretary.) BENJ. M. NEAD, EL Changing His Views. What's the matter with Brair of New Hampshire? At the last session. of the Senate he voted like alittle man against the free raw materials with which the Democrats under CLEVELAND wanted to infuse new life into the manufactur- ing industries. In common with other Republican leaders he held such a pro- position to be rank free trade. But from the tenor of an interview he had the other day with a reporter of the New York Herald it looks as if he beginning to enter- tain views that have a free trade leaning. He said “I am’ earaestly in favor of such changes in the present law as will admit free of duty into this section of the country iron ore and coal from the provinces.” But if Brair believes that iron ore and coal from Canada should escape the tariff for the benefit of the iron manu- facturers of New England, what is to prevent him from favoring the free ad" mission of wool and other raw materi. als for the benefit of manufacturers in all parts of the country ? If he is ready to yield one point in the question of free raw materials,why can’t he consis- tently abandon the entire position of tariffing the commodities required by our manufacturing industries? Is it unreasonable to believe that Brair is budding into a free trader? is Can a Sovereign State Collapse ? The State of Nevada is in a bad way. It never was much of a State, having been smuggled into the Union to serve a political purpose, coming in with scarcely enough population to entitle it to admission. Since joining the sister- hood the number of its people has not increased enough to raise it above its original insignificance, and, being a pocket-borough sort of affair, during its entire statehood it has been put to use by certain silver kings in furnishing them with places in Congress. This is rather a pitiful situation for a sovereign State to be in and there is no indication that itis going to improve. It there should be a failure to bear the expense of a State government we shall have the novel spectacle of a collapsed sovereignty, and it really looks as if from that cause Nevada may be over- taken by such a collapse. What could be done with it under such circumstances? Is there any authority vested in any branch of the government to declare that a sovereign State has been “busted” and should therefore step down and out? Could it be’relegated to a territorial condition? Isn't the sovereignty of a State inde- structible? The case of Nevada may furnish the constitutional lawyers with a very interesting and delicate ques- tion, ‘this important office well filled, they Jonxsox of Howard township is the The County Ticket. There is no reason under the sun why the ticket nominated by the Dem- ocratic convention on Tuesday last should not be elected by a substantial majority. The purpose of the Dem- ocracy of the county, as we understand it, is to secure competent me: to fill the offices. No one who is acquainted with the different gentlemen who have been honored with the nominations, and whose names appear at the head of this paper, will doubt for a minute the entire competency of any oue of them to fill well and creditably the positions for which they are named. Mr. RiLEy, the nominee for Associ ate Judge, is a native of Boalsburg, and has spent his entire life—(he is now in the fifties) within ‘the limits of the county. He 1s a gentleman of unim- peachable character, unquestioned in- | tegrity, f2arless in the performance of any duty, and of just such make up as will insure a cool, calm, and impartial Judge. There is no fanaticism about him on any subject, nor is he afflict- ed with that bull-head stubborness that refuses to listen to reason or heed the dictates of common sense. A maa of high moral character, sound judgment, and of wide intelligence, he will make a Judge whose decisions will be re- spected and whose acts on the bench will reflect credit on the court as well as upon the people who elected him. Of Mr. SCHAEFFER, the nominee for Prothonotary, it is almost useless for us to say anything—he is so well and so favorably known already all over the county as the present gentlemanly and efficient incumbent of that office. For three years he has filled the duties of the position for which he was renomi- nated on Tuesday, and we mean no re flection on any of his predecessors when we sav that it is an admitted fact, on the part of every body who has had business in his office or in the court of which he isthe clerk, that he has proved himself to be one of the best and most competent officials that has ever filled the place. Republicans and Democrats alike concede this, and when this is done it covers the whole argument. What is wanted is compe- tent, upright and gentlemanly officials. This Mr. ScuaerreEr has proved him- self tolbe, and as he is a man against whose official or private life nota word can be said, we cannot see why his election should not be made unani- mous, Iftour republican friends want will join hands with the rest of us in re-electing"Mr. SCHAEFFER. The District Attorney nomination went by the unanimous vote of the peo- ple of the county and of the convention, to J. C.Meygg, who has filled the of: fice solacceptably to the public and so creditably to himself. As a public prosecutor Mr. Meyer has been one of the must careful, considerate, and con- scientious officials that ever filled that office. He has conducted the many and important commonwealth cases that came before the court himself, sel- dom being required to ask for assistance, and in this way has saved to the coun- ty large amounts that have heretofore been charged to the public as fees for assistant counsel. Ie one of the young attorneys who has already risen to a prominent position at our bar, and has proved himself entirely compe- tent and worthy of the position to which he has been renominated. There is no one who questions his ability nor is there any one who doubts that the faithful and efficient manner in which he{has performed the duties of the office for the past three years will meet with full and just recogni- tion on the part of the people, and will secure his election by a larger majori- ty than he obtained in 1886. For County Surveyor Mr. Gro. D, is nominee. Mr. Johnson is by educa- tion and practice a surveyor, by occu- pation a farmer and lumberman. With the wild lands of the county, a matter that comes in connection with this office, he has probably a wid- er and more thorough knowledge than any surveyor now living within the county. Helis a gentleman of about fifty years of age, has been a resident of the county since boyhood, and will show the esteem he is held in by those who know him best by the very large vote that will be polled for him in that section of the county in which he re- sides. Dr. Jas. W. NEFF, the nominee for Coroner, is the same gentleman who wag elected to that position last fall, but who, throngh an unfortunate mis- take in printing the ticket, was prevent- ed from lifting his commission. He is arising young physician in Snow Shoe, where he stands high not only as a practitioner but as a citizen and a Democrat, and by his own personal worth and efforts will add scores of votes to the ticket which his graces, This, Democrats of the county, name is your ticket, There is not a man up- on it that you can not conscientiously and heartly support. It is a ticket you can elect easily because of its admitted worth and fitness and it 1s a ticket you should elect by the same old-time ma- jorities that used to cheer the hearts of the Democrats everywhere. | I TEE 1 FRET A v A Contrast. The working people of England are: in a contented frame of mind in regard to wages. There is no misunderstand- ing existing between them and their employers concerning the compensa- tion they receive for their labor. There ! | Democracy, was a most harmonious has been a gradual improvement in this respect for a number of years, with a prospect that English labor will reach a solution of the wage problem in advance of any other laboring popula- tion. Since the economic doctrines of CospeN were accepted the condition of the English working people has im- proved more than a hundred per cent. and at the same time the general in- dustrial and commercial prosperity of Great Britain has made a most won- derful advancement. Speaking of the condition of the English iron and steel industries, the Engineer, a leading trade journal -of London, of the date of July 12, says: The wages of the Northern steclworkers have been advaneed another 234 per cent. in accordance with the report of the accountants for the past three months. This will make 714 per cent.above what is called the standard rate and will remain in force, as the price to be paid, during July, August and September. In the Midlands the price of iron has still an up- ward tendency. The prices have been ad- vanced 10s. per ton during the past week. This advance in price will affect the wazes of the work-people, who, like the steelworkers reap some advantage from the rise in the market price of iron. This presents quitea different picture from that which is presented in the condition of the workmen employed by CarNecie and other American steel and iron barons, who are in a contin- ual strugele with their employers on After all that has been said about the great good that protection does the workingman, isn’t it singular that the American high tar- iff is attended with declining wages, while the compensation of labor is go- ing up under English free trade and labor disturbances have entirely ceased? But then it isn’t so singular when the cause and the effect are examined. With the whole world for a market English industry is kept constantly and profitably employed without such fluctuations in the demand for its out- put as attend American produc- tion that is limited to an oversupplied home market. A war tanff cramps the area of demand and the Anierican laborer suffers in consequence. the question of wages. How They Could Have Been Utilized. Farmers from different parts of the county are complaining that their turkey hens refused to hatch the pres- ent season, and as a consequence the turkey-crop in the county will be a small one. If they had only thought of it in time, this failure could have sasily been avoided by bringing their egos to the Commissioners’ office and giving HexprrsoNn and Docker a chance. They are a pair of the best and most persistent setters we have ever known, and as they are utterly worthless for the purpose for which they were elected, their continuous set- tings might have been utilized in this way aud the tax-payers have gotten something for the money they have paid them. Some people might have objected on account of the character of the broods they would have brought out, and others because of the “mixed” condition their young turkeys would likely have been in, but they would have had their hatching done all the same, if constant setting would have done it. We suggest that this matter be kept in memory until next season. The same two will occupy the same nests for a vear yet. How They Have lmproved the Mail Service. During the administration of Presi- dent CLEVELAND one never got done hearing Republican complaints of in- efficient service in the postal depart- ment. At that time a package of Warenyans, addressed to its subscrib- ers at Three Runs, Clearfield county, mailed on Friday morning would reach its destination promptly on Saturday. Under the improved (?) service of the Republican party, it now takes from Friday morning until Wednesday of the next week to get there. A man could walk out and carry the mail on his back and beat this Republican mail service between Bellefonte and Three Runs, just three days. ——A Republican exchange thinks that the biggest and most iniquitous trust—‘‘the Bourbon Trust of the solid South” —uwill be broken on the 5th of November. Does it expect that it will be done by Mahone's piratical crew of ex-rebels and played out carpet-baggers? | body, its action giving promise that Democrats Must Rescue the County from Bad Management The nomination of the Democratic ticket, which occurred on Tuesday, opens the campaign for the election of county officers aid summons the Dem- ocrats of the county to a performance of their duty which we trust will be performed with the earnestness, vigor and determination that marked their movements when they used to roll up the old fashioned Democratic majori- ties. ' The convention, composed of some of the best material of this county's the same harmony wiil prevail in the party's support of the candidates nomi- nated. There was no jar in the pro- ceedings, a circumstance that auspi- ciously indicates that there will be no dissatisfaction and factional clashing in the movements ot the campaign. The Democrats of the county have become convinced of the necessity of unanimous sentiment and united ac- tion. * It has been through Democratic bickering and disaffection that some of the most important of the county offi- ces have fallen into the hands of in- competent Republicans, to the injury of the public interests and the detri- ment of the tax-payers. Democrats who failed to give the party nomina- tions their faithful and united support have themselves to blame for the coun- ty finances getting into the bad condi- tion which characterizes the manage- ment of the present Republican board of commissioners. Because some of them did not do their duty we now find the county saddled with the incom- petency in the Commissioners’ office that is increasing the county liabilities, preparing a future burden of increased ! taxation, and involving the county fi- | nances in a state of disorder that will | take years to correct and bring back to the satisfactory condition that had been established by Democratic manage- ment. That we find taxes increased by a raised valuation of farms and other real estate is largely the fault of Demo- crats who failed to give that loyal sup- port to the ticket of their own party that was due from them, and thereby aided in the election of inefficient Republicans who, having promised to run the county on a two mill tax, now find it necessary to raise the taxable value of property in order to make an How They Seek to Use the Negro Rather Than to Help Him, Philadelphia Record. In discussing what they choose to call the “Negro Problem,” Senator Morrill, of Vermont, and other Republican writ- ers deliberately avert their gaze from the most essential feature of this question. These politicians betray that their chief concern is to so manipulate the colored vote as to hurl it in solid force upon the ballot-box. To this-end they are busily devising such legislation by Congress as would put the elections in the Southern States completely under the control of the General Government. The General Government, it is anticipated, would then have no difficulty in selecting its agents among the ignorant and unscru- pulous to sway the solid Scuthern ne- gro vote in behalf of the party in power. But in their intentness upon the means of manipulating the solid negro vote in the interest of party Senator Morrill and other republican statesmen have contract- ed a partisan strabismus that causes them to overlook those aspects of the question wlich most deeply concern the whole country. In the election of 1888 the plurality for Cleveland in the total returns ofthe United States for President was 100,476 votes, but thissignificant ex- pression of the popular will was defeated by an eccentric and partial operation. of the electoral system. In the eleven States of Alabama, Arkansas, rlorida, Geor- gia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Caro- lina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia the total vote for Harrison was 769,040. It may be safely estimated that at least 80 per cent, of this vote was cast by negroes. If tothis vote be added the negroes of Kentucky, Missouri, ‘West Virginia, Maryland and other States who voted for Harrison, itis en- tirely within bounds to estimate that Cleveland had upward of a million ma- jority of the white voters of the country in the election of 1888. : This factis not adduced in the least spirit of race prejudice, nor for the pur- pose of enforcing the proposition that to the whites belongs the credit for all the olitical freedom and progress that man- ¢ind has achieved through the ages. But the earnest consideration of the facts is essential to a satisfactory solution of the negro problem. The attempt of a party to hold the negro vote solid,” and to hurl it as a mass upon the ballot- | box without regard to current political issues or opinions, is the most serious danger that menaces the country’s po- litical development. In the conflicts of parties nobody thinks it worth while to discuss current questions of tariff and revenue before audiences of Southern negroes. These questions are regarded as beyond their political range. Even Fred Douglass and other orators of their race studiousiy evade current 1ssues and appeal to their gratitude to party (one of the worst of political sentiments) or to the prejudices and fears growing out of a former condi- tion. The new Protectionist party in the South is composed extensively of white men who treat the negroes as an inferior race, having nothing to do with politics but to vote solidly as their superiors may dictate. As in their former condition of slavery, the children of Ham in their appearance of fulfilling their promise. As the deficiency of revenue and the increase of expenses are augmented by bad management this expedient of increasing valuations must go on until the Republican commissioners have subjected the farms of the county to valuations for tax purposes greatly in excess of ;what they would bring at private sale. This bad state of affairs is the result of Democrats not standing up for their nominations as they should have done. But 1t has taught them a lesson which we trust will keep them united hereaf- ter and fixed in their determination to restore che county to hon :st and etfi- cient Democratic rule. CCS Sn SEER Either Ignorant of the Facts or a Will- fal Liar. The Republican of this week squirts its little pop-gun at the Democratic nominee for Associate Judge, charged : with the untruth that Mr. RILEY is the “whisky candidate” and “will favor the indiscriminate granting of licenses.” | Evidently this sleepy old organ of a | dirty clique is utterly ignorant of the | character, judgment and standing of the gentleman it refers to, or else wil- fully lies, in the hope of fooling voters who are Democrats and temperance men. If the Republican will look at the vote which placed Mr. RiLey upon the ! Democratic ticket, it will find that he was chosen for the place by the votes of instructed delegates from districts in the county which gave the largest ma- jorities for prokibition at the recent election. These districts knew Mr. Ricey; they knew him to be a man of sound judgment, of unimpeachable character and of the strictest integrity, and were willing to trast him on this as on all other quéstions coming be- fore the court, knowing that he would do his duty fearlessly, faithfully and to the best interests of the entire people. Is it atall probable that it Mr. RiLey was the kind of candidate the Re publican charges, he would have had the support of all the strong pro- hibition districts in the county, and par- ticularly when he was well known in thase districts ? Mr. RirLey is not a fool that would favor the establishment of whisky shops at every cross-road, nor is Lea fanatic who would set his own judg- ment up as higher than the law. —The Colutiibus centennial should be { made so big an affair that the great This kind of talk about the solid | Genoese in looking down from his snug South will not d vert the attention of; quarters aloft would be tickled all over the people from the robber trusts which with having discovered a continent ca- they are going to smash, pable of making such a demonstration. | enfranchisement are still hewers of wood i and drawers of water. | In this lies the real menace of the ne- gro problem to the political development of the coun ry. While the masses of the people in other sections of the United | States are becoming emancipated frow | the political errors and superstitions that ! have so long enthralled them, the negro | vote of the South is depended upon as | the last refuge of government abuses. The greed of Tarift Monopoly finds its last ally in the ignorance of the poor negroes whom it systematically despoils. The means of averting this danger is largely in the bands of the Southern | people. It consists not only in treating | the negroes with the utmost kindness | but in educating them in regard to their { political rights and duties. | Cleveland said in his Inaugural Address: | “There should be no pretext for anxiety ! touching the freemen in the enjoyment of their rights.” Their education is to be best accomplished by discussing among them these questions which affect their interests as members of the social and political organization. Under such a liberal and considerate policy the solid negro vote would melt "away, and there would be no decent ! pretext for Federal election laws to dra- go on the Southern people. Taxing Raw Materials Is Not FProtec- tion. Wade's Fibre and Fabrie. As a rule Fibre and Fabric has little - to complain of from its contemporaries, but oncein a while some one, as for in- "stance the Jersey City Argus of August 2, will state that Fibre and Fabric ‘has | taken the back track in regard to the wool tariff.” Such statements are due either to distortion of the real facts or to the circumstance that such papers as the Argus have but recently discoverad Fibre aad Fabric. Some of the ablest articles calling the attention of our man- ufacturers to the advantage of free wool appeared during the last Presidential campaign. These articles contained facts that the most ardent high protec- tionist could not controvert, but they were overlooked at the time during the heat and excitement of the campaign. Wade's Fibre and Fabric is run on principle and does not require ‘back track.” While it believes in protection sufficient to protect, it knows that taxed raw materials are not protection. There are none so blind as those who will not see. There is a large iron plant almost within sight of us that by taxed raw materials has been driven out of ex- istence. Such a state of affairs could not pass unnoticed if partisanship had not blinded the majority. sree Bodies Still Being Found at Johnstown. JouNsTowN, Aug. 13—On an aver- age there have been tw bodies found every day during the past week. There undoubtedly area great many more in the cellars all over town, und at the present rate of cleaning up they will not all be exhumed this year. Two’ bodies that were recovered to-day have been identi fied as Mr. Evan Hughes and Miss Ber- tha Stryar. The trunk of Florence Massey, of Sun Francisco, was taken charge of to-day by the Pennsylvania railroad authorities. They also fo- warded a valise belonging to Miss Bryan to Philadelphia. As Grover | Sullivan and Lowry. The Champion Assures the Governor of His Warm and Personal Friendship VICKSBURG, Miss., August 8.—The first meeting between Governor Lowry and John L. Sullivan is described as a highly interesting episode of the cham- pion’s journey. The Governor happen- ed to board the train bearing the Sulli- van party at Jackson, bound for ‘Meri- dian. The car of Colonel J. C. Clarke, Sup- erintendentof the Mobile and Ohio Road, was attached to the train. The Colonel learning that the Governor was aboard, invited him to ride with Lim in his pri- vate car, which invitation was accepted. ‘When the train was nearing Meridian, just after dark, the Governor, hearing Sheriff Chiles’ voice, looked up and be- held John L. Sullivan standing in front of him. Sheriff Chiles said: “@Governor, at Mr. Sullivan’s request, I have brought him back to see you.” John L. with hat in hand, said in sub- stance . ‘Yes, your Excellency, I want- ed to pay my respects to you. I have no idea that you have any ill feeling to- ward me personally, and I want to say to your Excellency that I have no hard feelings toward you and do not blame you for performing your duty as the Governor of your State. But, Governor, if you knew me well ycu would know that I am not a bad-heart- ed man. Ido not want to break your laws. I did not know that the fight was to come off in Mississippi until the last minute, when it was too late for me to remedy it; it was then fight or be called a coward. You would be like I was. You wouldn't allow them to call you a coward without fighting. I wish you well, and hope that you may have success in life and in all your efforts to enforce laws which I had ro intention of breaking; and I am your warm and per- sonal friend, John L. Sullivan.” John L. then bowed himself out. The Governor, in his courteous way, simply acknowledged the greeting. Colonel Clarke turned to him, as the big fellow went cut the door, and said: “Governor, he said that pretty well, didn’t he? He isa man of more intelli- gence than IT had expected.” The Governor has not given his im- pressions of Sullivan yet; but those who were near say that it was plain that the big fellow’s gentlemanly demeanor touched the Governor in a soft spot. A Pennsylvania Boa Constrictor. The Punxutawny Spirit comes to the front with the fcllowing snake story which gives Jefferson counly an undis- puted title to the cake. Thecdore Pantall, proprietor of the Hotel Pantall, and one of the principal stockholders in the Mahoning Bank, lives on a farm about a mile east of town. His farmer is Peter W. Diltz, a sober, industrious, and thoroughly re- liable man so that what we are about to relate, though perhaps the biggest snake story of the season, is the plain unvar- nished truth. On last Thursday Mr. Diltz was raking hay in a field adjoining the woods with a hay rake. As the horses approached a large brush pile in the fence corner they began to snuff the air and act very strangely. As they drew near they reared up and snorted and became frantic with terror. Mr. Diltz suspected that there was some- thing wrong about the brush pile, and, turning the horses around and driving them some distance away, went back to investigate. He struck the brush pile with a stick. In an instant there was a terrible commotion within. The brush was heaved about as though a cyclone had struck it, and then Mr. Diltz wit- nessed a sight that transfixed him to the spot and froze the blood in his veins. A huge yellow snake, not less than six- teen feet long, and as thick around the middle as a large log, rushed out and down over the hill. Ithad a full grown rabbit about half way in its mouth, and after running two or three times the length of itself it threw the rabbit out. It ran with its head elevated about two feet from the ground. Just below the northwest corner of the field is a ravine filled with logs, brush and stone. Into this the serpent made its way and dis- appeared. After recovering sufficiently from his fright, Mr. Diltz went and look- ed atthe rabbit. It resembled a drown- ed rat. It was coated with a slimysub- stance, and appeared very limp, but its heart still fluttered and its limbs moved convulsively, But Mr. Diltz did not remain long in that locality for fear the serpent. would take a notion to return for the rabbit. Nor did he rake any more hay in that field. Money could not induce him to enter itagain. There is no doubt whatever of the truth of this story, as Mr. Pantall afterward saw the rabbit, and also the place where the snake had lain, and Mr. Diltz is will- ing to testify to its correctness under oath. The probability is that this ser- pent has escaped from some traveling menagerie, as itis not of a species in- digenous to North America, and from its enormous size, must belong to the constrictor family. Huns on the Rampage. A dispatch from Scottdale, Westmore- land Co., on Saturday said : The Hun- garians at Norwood refused to go to work this morning because they did not understand that the strike was settled. Seeing that the Alico and Bessemer works were running they formed a howl- ing mob of about 500, and started for those plants. The men at the Alico mines were warned in time and fled. They then went towards the office and started coal wagon’s down the slope to wreck and block the entrance so that no coal could de hoisted. : They then went to the Bessemer, and on the way met John M. Dayton, who was riding in a buggy. He tried to per- suade them to return to work, but the in- furiated mob overturned his buggy, beat und cut him so that his life is despaired of. The Huns reached Bessemer and went to the house of an old man named Gilhooly, to look for the mine boss. Fail- ing to find him, they then beat in the windows of his house. A man named Love was also caught at the pit mouth and treated in the same manner. They next made a descentupon a store and after breaking the windows and doors in carried off all the bread and bo- logna they could find on the premises. They then met John Keagan and a num- ber of leading strikers who explained to them the situation.