RE OS TR X EE Terms 8! 00 A Year,in Advance Bellefonte, Pa., February 27, 1891. GRAY MEEK, - - EniTon Pe. Democratic County Committee, 1891. see W. 8. Galbraith ... Joseph Wise John Dunlap . John 'I'. Lee . H. A. Moore A. M. Butler ... A.C. Musser James A. Lukens ... C. A. Faulkner A J Gorton .... Bo M.Griest Eugen Meeker . Harvey Benner Bellefonte, N. W.... “ S. VW... ww... Centre Hall ' orough. Howard Borough... Milesburg Borough. Milheim Borough... Philiosburg, 1st W., 1 2d W 3d W.. Boggs, sn . Philip Confer et 2d T. F. Adams -“ P... G. H Leyma College, E. P .. W. H. Mokle o =P. James Foster N. J. McCloskey Daniel Dreibelbis Geo. W. Keichline .. Chas. W. Fisher James P. Grove Isaac M. Orndorf Geo. B. Shaffer . Eilis Lytle J. W. Keller .T. Leathers ... Henry Hale Alfred Bitner Curtin . Ferguson, E. P... a w.pP. spend Haines, E P “ ¥.pP Haltmoon... 1 Marion. John J. Shaffer Miles, James P. Frank Patton .. P. A. Sellers Pénn., J. C. Stover Potter, N. P . 8. W. Smith ‘e S. P . Jas. B. Spangler Rush, N. P.. Jas. Dumbleton © 8.P..., Hugh McCann Snow Shoe, W. P. Thomas Turbidy “ EP .. John D. Brown Spring, 8. P....... Jerry Donovan € N:P . James Carson o W. P. «.. EE. Ardery Taylor... . W.T. Hoover Chas. H. Rush . D. A. Dietrick .... O.D.Eberts R, Chairman. Sr ——————— Legislative Apportionment, The present Legislature will be re quired to make a new apportionment of tire members of the ITouse of Repre- sentatives to accord with the popula The New tion as shown by the recent census. The constitution the members shall be apportioned among requires that the counties on a ratio obtained by di- viding the population of the State by 200. The census of 1890 reports the population to he 5,238,014, the division of which by 200 gives 26,200 as the ratio of representation. Lvery county is entitled to one representative without regard to the extent of its population. For every ratio there shall be a repre- sentative, and also one where there is a fraction excee ling halt a ratio. Cen- tre county, for example, has a popula- tion of 43,269. This does not amount to two fall ratios, which would be 52,- 580. Bat as the fraction is more than half a ratio, she will retain her two re. presentatives. The ratio is safficient- ly high to deprive a number of coun- ties of one member. The counties that will each lose a member are Adams, Bedford, Bradford, Chester, Clarion, Columbia, Crawtord, Huntingdon, In- diana, Lancaster, La wrenee, Mercer, Schuylkill,Somerset and Wayne. Alle- gheny will from 16 to 20, and each of the follow. ing counties wiil gain one: Blair, Clear- gain four members, going up field, Jefferson, Lackawanna, Luzerre, and Northumberland, Piiladelphia will retain her present number of repre- sentatives, 39. Vill Have His Hands Fall. If it be true, as announced, that it is the intention of M. S. Quay to sue for libel every newspeper that published the charges of treasury embezzlement against him, he will have his hands full and will give the lawyers a big job. The alleged libel has heen published in all the political newspapers in the land except those of a partisan Republi- can stripe. When Mr. Quay shall bring his suits he will have to employ about half of the lawyers in the country, and the sheriffs and deputies all over this land will be kept busy serving writs and making arrests, and after the offon. dersshall have been convicted the jails will be crammed with editors undergo- ing punishment for having libeled the pure and honest junior Senator from TT Pg Se Tr Hardly Worth a Denial. The parties who got up the report that Grover CLEVELAND was about to announce that he would not be a can- didate for the Presidency, coupled with it the story that he would appoint Ex- Secretary WrITNuY his political leg- atee. Itis hardly necessary for Mr. WiinNey to take the trouble to deny that CLevELaND has withdrawn from the Presidential contest of 1892. Any one could see at a glance that the re- port was the work of an enemy and in the interest of some other candidate, Whoever eventually may be the nom- inee it is very clear at this time that Mr. CLevELAND 18 more talked about in connection with the nomination than all other candidates put together: Coucerning the statements that the Ex-President is not a candidate for the 1892 coatest Ex-Secretary WaITNEY said to a New York Herald reporter, Mr. Cleveland is not a candidate in my opin- ion, except this far: He is committed to the fight. He will never be sati-fied until tariff reform wins. He will do every thing he can to aid the tariff reform fight, and it naturally keeps him to the front. He is a candidate a good deal more for the fight than he is for the Presidency. When a President takes his seat in 1888, but conveniently lost tor two as the result of a tariff reform victory Mr. Cleveland will be satisfied, whoever it is. Meanwhile, he isn’t talking about declining, and I am not in the business of pulling other candidates out or of putting myself in the race for the Presidency. This ought to settle the report that Mr. WrHiTNEY has been by CLEVELAND as succeeding to his claim named to the nomination. rw ——— ~——On Wednesday Mr. WHERRY of the House, at Harrisburg, reported fa- vorably the bill providing for the hold- ing of a constitutional convention rela- tive to a reform of the ballot system. This shouid be pushed through to a successful consummation, but in the meanwhile the reform ballot bill that is before the Legislature shonld be | passed for immediate use until the con- stitutional convention ean do its work. | EE TLIC 8 Frey ihe License Graduation Bill. The bill providing for the issuing of | liquor licenses by the courts on the ba- sis of population, not more than one license for every 700 inhabilants, has been reported in the Senate with a fav- | orable recommendation by the com- mittee which had it under considera- | tien. This is the first attempt that has’ been made to regulate the granting of : licenses by graduation. The bill, as | we anderstand it. does not require the | courts to grant licenses until the ratio of one license to every 700 of popula- tion is filled, but it restrains the grant- ing beyond that ratio. It would seem to be a restraint upon the evils of an excessive liquor traffic, Congressman Wik, of Illinois, has presented a resolution asking for the impeachment of Speaker Ree, the charge against him being founded upon the wanton and despotic charac- ter of his official conduct, The Demo- cratic members have more; reason to vo'e for such a resolution than tor the customary resolution of thanks, - —— President Harrison has select. ed Ex-Governor Foster, of Ohio, 2s the successor of the late Secretary Wixpox in the Treasury Department, It was reported that he would make this selection and therefore it is no sur- prise. The new Secretary is a man cf considerable political and business ex- perience, but will scarcely size up to his predecessor whose place he has been selected to fill. He belongs to the Ohio school of Republican politi- cians; has always been considered tricky, and is familiarly known in his State as “Calico Charley.” It is be- lieved that Lis appointment has been made in the interest of McKINLEY, 28 opposed to ForRAKER, and means the Pennsylvania. This alleged intention of Mr. Quay does not, however, alarm the New York World which challenges the Senator to bring his action of libel, and claiws to be anxious to Lave the matter tesied in the courts, —Tle retail merchants of Green- ville, Mercer county, have a co-opera- tive organization that might be imitat- ed with profit in every town in the ‘commonwealth, and city too. Its pur- pose is to inform each other in regard £0 people who will not pay their debts. A man who refuses to square his ac counts is made known to all the mem- bers of the association, and thencefor. award his name is Deunis with them when it comes to a request to “put ig down on the slate.” ——An Erie county suggestion is that a number of neighboring counties unite with it and build a workhouse for their joint use. Erie has a surplus of $90,000 in her tregsury, and is said to be willing to devote part or all of it to that purpose. The Oil City Blizzard thinks the suggestion a good one, add- ing that jail imprisonment for vaga- bonds is no punishment. | about. | attack on the cormorants who have i | that city a medium of municipal rob - , bery. It is wonderful that the plunder perpetrated in that job was tolerated as tensive pile as ome of the leading nomination of McKINLEY as the next Republican candidate for Governor in Ohio. Governor Parrison has{signed the concurrent resolution authorizing the appointment of a commission to revise the mining laws affecting the bituminous coal regions of the state. There is no field where reforms are more needed, and the Governor has done well in helping to bring them ——The Prese and other papers of Philadelphia have commenced an been making the big pablic building of long as it has been. CuarLes Foster, of Ohio, the new Secretary of the Treasury, is a millionaire who accumulated his ex- managers of the Standard oil monopo- ly. As the financial minister of a A Suspicious Measure, i California's experience should be a lesson to those who want oni Siate 10 go into the school book publishing business. The Colifornian enterprise may have been profitable to the parties that had a share of the “divvy,” but so far as the interest of the State was con- cerned it was a perfect failure. It fail- ed both as to price and quality of the work. The books were so poorly made that they would hardly last a month ; so ill-adapted to school use that there is an universal demand for their entire and immediate revision; and sodear in price that two successive State superintend- | eats have certified that cheaper and bet- ter books can bebought at regular rates of private publishers. A report, made years, shows that down to October 1, 1887, the school books, which brought $32,237.85, actually cost the State B07, 465.07, making the loss to that time, in actual expenses, $35,126.19. A similar result may be expected from a similar project proposed at Har- risburg, for it is quite certain that who- ever is pushing this thing he or they | care less for the interest of the State and the advantage of the schools than they care for their own profit. PE ——— The Crawford county alms. | house is said to be in ahout as deplor- able a condition as the Republican | party of that county, TJamus Pastor. tous and Isaac Cure, two grand jarors who visited the institution recently, say it has not been whitewashed for years; thatit is dirty; that offensive odors abound; that the drinking water is con- taminated by drainage from the cow | yards, and that the outhouses are in a terrible condition 1 ee ———a: ine ing — Washington's birthday hav been duly celebrated, next in order will be the payment of our respects to eood SAINT Patrick. Each of these worthies was the Father of his Country, ard it is hard todo- | termine whether Wasmixaron did a | biager thing for America by driving out the British than Sav Patrick did for Ireland by expelling the snakes, rere ——— -—It is for the Legislature to de ! termine whether Pennsylvania shall have honest elections. — - i ——— | Farmers or Professional Honors—Re- Ply to Judge Yerkes and Other Usurpers, Centre Havr, Pa., Feb, 13, 1301, I have recently received numerous letters and newspaper clippings from pa- | trons setting forth what certain lawyers | Judges and other professional men had said at farmers’ meetings, asking we to answer the same. Here is one cred- ited to Judge Yerkes, of Bucks county: “Gentlemen, the real cause of your depression lies west of the Mississippi, | The Grange influence of the Eastern States is la~gely responsible for its growth. Only a few years ago they of | the East responded to the ¢:1! of their | fellows of the West and joined in heir demands, and contributed their power | in'congress and elsewhere, in donating the public lands for free homestead, to actual settlers and railroad companies, who in turn donated them to forejon | immigrants and cheap laborers. Fi. | nally the products of all this munifi- | cence were brought to your home markets by these fostered and com pet- | ing railroads, and as the result of the Granger cry of government control a reducticn of railroad charges. The farmers of the East are not interested in the reduction of freights from the Weat when the products of that section | are brought to compete with theirs in their own markets and in all the mark. | ets of the world. Those who joined | these demands are reaping the fruits. | Have a care that yon do not repeat | the mistake. The Farmers’ Alliance i of the broad South and the great West | are more powerful than yan can hope | to become. Sitnated so far inland | from the great seaport are you sure | their desires will satisfy your wants ?” Itis a great pity that men who would aspire to the dignity of Judges | of courts, with broad and liberal views of the law and the spirit of the free in- | stitutions of a great country, should | shrivel up into such narrow contracted | views of the institutions and social re- lations of a great country like ours. If these judges know anything they know that charters for transportation companies emanate from the several States, and that they are subject to State coutrol, that a law controlling freight charges in Illinois has no au. thority over freight chargesin Pennsyl- vania excepting so far as it comes un- der the Interstate Commerce law brought about by the Grange, which prevents a greater charge for a short haul than the longer, and even if all claimed were true it would apply to our swn State as well as west of the Mississippi. These liberal minded judges had better tear up our raitroads and internal improve- ments and turn the wheels of progress and ¢'vilization backwards to the ages from whence they draw their broaden. ed inspiration, Notwithstanding we have had much smaller crops in proportion to popula- tion since the crash 1n 1873 than we bad from 1865 to 1873, prices have been filty percent. lower ; not owing to over- production either, for every bushel of wheat and every pound of beef has been needed for sustenace. Therefore low prices are not owing to the conven- iences of railroads, nor to overproduc- | monopoly administration he 15 the right mao in the right place. | causes, and the Grange h tion, but must be attributed to other ; rates of interest have contracted in the - | i : , | | conut of their salaries and tree passes, | ; your talking, or did yon compel the | farmers to take a back seat to listen to ‘minded citizens? What claims have these men I sighted policy. lowed to dominate their own meetings | sist themsels es, | 792, as follows : Rebersburg 150, Centre { Hall 90, Pine Grove Mills 180, Shiloh | 102, Zion 110 and Boalsburg 160. , & mail carrier in Lock Haven, was ar- | ters that were in his charge. reacy” at the rate of $4,000,000 per month until we had the panic of 1873, in order to force a corner in money for the benefit of the banks, but still not satisfied, demonetization of silver must fol'o -, which sent the price of silver down, giving the debtor classes of In- diaand Russia the advantage in the Huropean markets over the American farmer, the India and Russian farmer receiving twenty to thirty cents more for Lis wheat in silver currency than the American farmer for his gold car- reacy. But while all this shrinking of | values has heen going on in the Unit- ed States on account of this selfish imbecile policy of our G verminent, neither the farm mortgages nor their least and now it takes two bushels of wheat and two heads of cattle to pay a debt that had the Government lef; the currency of the country undisturbed half that amount would have paid and without injury to any class, as the pop- ulation and business of the country would so gradually have adjusted itself as not to have disturbed the financial relations of the country, The farmers in the Grange under- stand the situation if | lawyers and ! judges don’t, or do not want to on ac going further than when the farmer on. ly gets half price for his products as | thereby the professional men can live cheaper. But farmers, why com plain ? What right had you to invite these men to be orators at your farmers’ meetings ? Had you no tarmers to do the narrow diatribes and misrepresen- tations belittling the farmer and his or ganization to the shame and indigna- tion of all intelligent farmers and fair upon the farmers? Did they ever invite the farmer to their town meetings to address their people that you should fawn at their feet and bestow upon them honors that belong to your own class? Such a policy is a usurpation and a dishonor to the farmiag class, and you are reaping the fruits of your short- If farmers are not al- by the managers then they should dominate the management. tespectfully. LeoNarp Ruoxg. ADDITIONAL LOCALS. Overseer Schofield is farnishing employment to all those who are asking charity of the town. He is havirg stones broken for use op the streets, and pays fair wages to all who will thus as- The total number of singers who attended Prof. P. H. Meyer's musical conventions during the past winter was The First National Bank of Bellefonte is among the petitioners ask for the removal of the Guarantee Trust and Safe Deposit Company of Philadelphia from the assigneeship of the estate of Robert Hare Powell on the charge of grossly fraudulent mismanage ment. The estate is worth $4,000,000. ——Last Wednesday Tsaac Crotzer, rested for abstracting money from let- Inspector Macready of Philadelphia made the ar- rest. The circumstance that money had been missed for the pastten months led to the suspicion that Crotzer was doing this bad work. After he was arrested he acknowledged his guilt. Maj. Jno. A. Wolf, of Philips- burg, was in town Wednesday and trom his appearance we were led; to believe that the smiling countenance and happy manner, with which politicians are wont to beguile the voters, was not affected, but that it is genuine. The Maj. seem- ed as pleasant as a ark and felt as though his library would be incomplete without the WATCHMAN so he carried a receipt, up to some time in "92, away with him. Hu~e ON TrursDAY.—Harry Marsh was hung yesterday, at Ebensburg for the murder of Clara Shakeshaft, which occurred at Galitzln last July. He was paying attention to his victim at the time of the murder and there was no apparent reason for his taking her life. His age was about 27 and he was Eng- lish by birth. He took his fate cooly, smoking a cigar while examining the scaffold which he said wasa good job. NEARLY A Farar Fire.—Last Oc- tober Geo. D. Johnston and §. family moved from this county to Wistar, Clinton county, where he took charge of the shingle mill operated by J. TF, Lucas & Son, of Moshanon. After working hard all winter Mr. Johnson and his family were awakened on Sun- dey morning, Feb. 15th, by the smell of smoke, They arose quickly, but the fire had gained such headway that the only eseaps was through the windows. J. B. Swartz, of Beech Creek was badly burned about the head, face and hands and teet, and H. H. Johnston had his hands burned quite seriously, Other- wise all of the inmates of the house, five men and Mr. Johnstons family of four, escaped uninjured, except to be slightly frost bitten. Nearly all their clothing was burned in the fire the origin of which is not known. We extend our sympathy to Mr. Johnston and his Tae CriNvoN CouNry Bribe STEAL —After an investigation of the ulleged overcharge for building county bridges in Clinton county, the William. sport Gazette § Bulletin comments as follows : After a careful examination of the contracts the Auditors filed their report wherein they hold the commissioners re- sponsible for $16,163.55. This they claimas the amount that was stolen from the county treasury by their bridge contracts and that Messrs. J. D. Engles, John Grugen and H. B. Klechner wiil be held responsible for the same. This will make over $5,000 for each to refund. Rather a large sum, but it is a warning to other officials. E. T. Gallagher who did the masonry in this overcharged work is the same man who was given the contract on the Milesburg and Karthaus bridges by the recent Centre county commissioners. Mes 8S. S. Brair Dies.-—Our neigh- boring town, Tyrone, was shocked on Tuesday last to learn of the death of Mrs. Samuel S. Blair the most estimable wife of Supt. Blair, of the Tyrone Di- vision of the Penna. Ruil-road. All of Tuesday morning Mrs. Blair bad been troubled with neuralgic pains in the head, but in the afternoon she felt so much better that, in company with her | husband, she went down town to offer her sympath’es to Mrs J. IL. Mitchell who has lately been bereaved of her son, She had been 1n Mrs. Mitehell’s house but a few moments, when with a sob, she was stricken with congestion of the brain. A cot was procured and she was carried to her home on Lincoln Avenue, where, notwithstanding sll that science could do, she passed peacefully away about 10 o'clock p. m. * The deceased whose maiden name was Adeline Elizabeth Wolf, was born at Gettysburg, Nov. 9th 1833. She was married to Mr. Blair at Columbia, in 1859, and moved to her home in Tyrone in 1873. Surviving her are her husband and four sons. The latter are Charles F., manager of Blair Bios’ coal interests, Horace C., at present a student in the law school of the University of Penn- sylvania; Louis B., in charge of Blair Bros’ mine at Retort, Pa.; and S. How- ard, a student at Pennsylvania State College. She was a devout and practical Christian, a devoted member of the First Presbyterian church of Tyrone, and an unselfish follower of the teach- ings of Him in whom she bad long ago placed her implicit faith and trust. That her last illness overtook her when she was engaged in the noble effort of bring- ing a measure of comfort to a sorrowing heart, is in itself a beautiful index to ber character. Brief funeral services will be conduct- ed at the late residence of the deceased this Friday afternoon at three o’clock, by ber pastor Rev. J. R. Davies. The remains will be laid to rest in Tyrone cemetery. A NATURAL PHENOMENON.——On the road leading from Pleasant Gap to Zion can be seen a freak of nature which has been puzzling the heads of the people of this county for the last ten days. Ttisa miniature lake of water covering about 60 or 70 acres of the best land on the farms of Messrs. Gentzell and Kauff- man, about five miles from Bellefonte, and as yet 1ts source is a profound mys- tery. The water in the lake is clear and cold and this fact gives rise to the theory that the smail pond which is on the Gentzell farm has become the vent for some swollen underground current. The lake lies in a natural basin about one and one half miles from the foot of Nittany mountain and in some places is twenty feet in depth. On the surface ofthe water the fences are floating, and the road leading from Pleasant Gap to Zion is completely submerged and alto- gether impassable unless one takes to a boat or concludes to swim it. Standing at Mr. Gentzell’s house this pretty body of water presents quite an attractive ap- pearance. When the WATCHMAN re- porter visited it the wind was just strong enough to slightly rufile its sur- face and the little white capped waves, as they rippled on the shores which are covered with green grain, made us feel quite as if we had an inland sea. Many theories are being advanced as | to its cause, the most acceptable one being that the recent rains caused the snow to melt on the mountains near by, and the water followed the trend of the rocks into this depression. Another is that it is simply the overflow of some under- ground current which has been swollen by the recent heavy rains and melting snow. Whatever the cause may be it is a fuct that the lake has some- thing of regularity about its appearance, forit issaid by people who know, that it has appeared every seven years for about twenty-five years. At its first ap- pearance it was somewhat larger than itis now, but if mother nature should decide to keep this basin permanently for her tear drops she would be indebt- ed to Messrs. Gentzell and Kauffman for about sixty acres of their most arable farm land. At present the lake shows no sign of as clearly ont- lined it—*it is contraction of the cur- family in their serious loss. rise or decrease, though a slight fall was noted about the middle of the week. Two Deatus.—The people of Centre Hall and vicinity were surprised to learn of the sudden death of Mrs. D. A. Bocz- er. which occurred at her home in that place, on Wednesday evening last. She had been ill only since Monday and hr demise was a great shock to her many friends. Before ber marriage to Mr. Evozer she was Miss Bessie Boal, ore of the most charming young girls in Penn's Valley and was loved and admired by all who knew her. A husband and three small children are left to mourn the loss of a faithful wife and loving mother. ” Mrs. George Nearhoot, of Centre Hall, died the same evening of cancer. She had been suffering with this dread disease for a long time and death came to relieve her forever of her sufferings, Her death is much lamented by a large number of friends. The funerals of both the deceased will take place to-morrow, Saturday. Tne TEMPERANCE PETITIONS,—~Yes- terday morning, Thursday, the petitions against the granting of license in Belle- fonte and Philipsburg were filed in the Prothcnotary’s office. The number of signers in each ward is as follows: Against the Bush House license, 157 S. W., 270 N. W., and 65in the W. W. Against the Brockerhoff House license : 1578. W., 67 W. W. ard 270 N. W. Against the Garman House license: 260 N. W.,157S. W.and 67 W. W. Against G. Haag, Cummings House: 1578. W., 67 W. W. and 270 N.W. In Philipsburg the remonstrance was made against the granting of any lic- censes, whatever, and in the 1st ward it had 78 signers. while 93 people in the 20d ward attached their signatures to the paper. The number of signers it bad in the 8rd ward we did not take time to count but judge that there are about 75 or 80. . In Spring and Benner townships 129 people declared against the granting of a brewing license to Mrs. L. Haas. BURNED TO Drari.—Max Seigel , a young German, was burned to death in the flames which destroyed the stable owned by Kimmel and Werner, brew- ers, in Altoona, early Wednesday morn- ing. The fire broke out ahout 12:30 a. m., and when Chief Malloy went up into the hay mow about an hour later to see if the flames were all out he discovered the charred remains of the unfortunate young man. Seigel was employed in the brewery until last Wednesday when he quit, The stable was a favorite loaf- ing place. ; AND Sr. Lighted Trains, Air Signals, between St. Paul and Min neapolis, CHrcAGo, MILWAUKEE PauL Rarnway. — Electric and Steam Heated Vestibuled with Westinghouse Chicago, daily. Electric Lighted and Steam Heated Vestibuled Trains between Chicago, Council Bluffs and Omaha, daily. Through Vestibuled Sleeping Cars, daily, between Chicago, Butte, Tacoma, Seattle, and Portland, Ore. Solid Trains between Chicago and principal points in Northern Wisconsin and the Peninsula of Michigan. Daily Trains between St, Paul, Min- neapolis and Kansas City via the Hed- rick Route. Through Sleeping Cars, daily, be- tween St. Louis, St. Paul and Minne- apolis. . The finest Dining Cars in the World. The best Sleeping Cars. Electric Reading Lamps in Berths. 6,100 miles of road in Illinois, Wis- consin, Northern Michigan, Towa, Min- nesota, Missouri, South Dakota and North Dakota. Everything First-Class. First-Class People patronize First- Class Lines. Ticket Agents everywhere sell Tick- ets over the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway. 2¢ THRILLING ADVENTURE WITH A Brar.— Week before last while a band of choppers were at work felling trees on Litchtenwaber’s tract, in the Seven Mountains, nine miles southwest of Pardee, on the Lewisburg & Tyrone R. R., they cut down a tree which fell on a rock under which a bear had his winter quarters. The animal resented the in- sult by coming out and attacking the choppers with such fury as to require the united efforts of half a dozen men to kill it, and only succumbed after having received nine cuts in the head and body from axes in the hands of the men. It was a monster she-bear and exploration of her lair revealed the presence of two cubs only a few days old and still blind. The cubs were removed to the camp of Adam Krebbs and tenderly nursed, but one of them died the day after its cap- ture.— Middleburg Post. District Institute, No. 2.—A Teachers’ and Directors’ District Insti- tute will be held at Millheim, Pa., be- ginning Friday evening, March 6ch,and continuing the following day. The district includes the to wnships of Gregg, Penn, Haines and Miles, and Milheim borough, but all persons inter- ested in the welfare of our schools are cordially mvited to attend and partici- pate in the exercises, D. F. Fortney, Esq., of Bellefonte, will be present, and on Friday evening will lecture on “The Relation of School Directors to the Schools.” Tt is earnest- ly hoped that all the directors of the district will be present to hear this lec- ture. Ex-County Superintendents Meyer and Wolf will also be present, and give the teachers and directors the benefit of their experience in school work. §