AN Demorraticil tcman —~seD GRAY MEEK. 23 | — BY P. Ink Slings. —“BRYAN brings silver and success.” — Silver and success is an alliteration in which there is sure to be luck. — America for Americans. England shall never dictate a policy for us. —England is howling for. MCKINLEY and the gold standard. How about that Democratic truckling to JOHN BULL now ? —Free silver will elect WILLIAM JEN- NINGS BRYAN the next President of the United States, but free potatoes won't make HARRISON Kline the next treasurer of Centre county. — Men who can leave their party on the pretext of being dissatisfied with a money plank incorporated in its platform are in- deed hard up for an excuse to prove the selfishness of their hatures. —This will be another campaign of edu- cation. It will be a kind of financial school that every one will go through and come out with sixteen grains of sense to every one they had before entering. —The New York socialists have denoun- ced the Democratic piatform and BRYAN and declared for MCKINLEY and gold. This is given simply to show that all the bad men are not in the Democratic party after all. —The Republicans who have been shout- ing ‘‘Anarchist ?”’ at every Democrat in- sight, since the Chicago convention, will hardly know where they are at now that HERR MosT, the leader of the anarchists, has declared for MCKINLEY and gold. —The New York Sun fought President CLEVELAND when he ran against BLAINE, in 1884. It has never said a kind word about him since that time. . The Sun did not keep him from being elected, however, nor will it make anything by its avowed purpose of trying to defeat BRYAN. —As our old friend SoL PECK said: “We licked England twice, when we had only a few million people, and sent her red coats off home convinced that we could take care of ourselves. If we can’t look after ourselves now, when we have sixty-seven millions population, then it is time a guardian is - appointed for Uncle SAM.” We'll make our own financial policy. — Had the Democratic party, at Chicago, declared for gold there would have been but three or four States it could have hoped to carry in the presidential election. Yet this condition would gladly have been thrust upon it by the few selfish money lending classes, that have bolted, not be- cause Democracy has foresworn one of her cardinal principles but because she has championed the cause of the masses as against that of the classes. —To the doubting, who are afraid we would have a fifty four cent dollar in the event that silver is remonetized, we merely want to state that in 1873, the time it was demonetized, the amount of silver that is now in a dollar was worth 103 cents. When the government again recognizes silver as part of the “coin,” it was designed by the constitution to be, gold will seek its nat- ural level and there will be no more pre- miums for the SHYLOCKS, of Wall street. —Wednesday’s city papers devoted col- umns of space to the announcement that the Hon. EZEKIEL T. COOPER, of Dover, Del., a delegate to the recent Chicago convention, | | party has entered upon a most momentous had flopped to McKINLEY. It is a cold day for the gold cause when its promoters have to make such a fuss over ‘ZEKE COOPER, a man whom- you would have to know before you could thoroughly appre- ciate him. His “influential paper’’ is the Dover Index, a very weekly sheet, that is not built on a plan to make many converts to any cause. find no more dangerous class of holters If the Republicans can- than the Hon. “ZEKE” represents there | will not be much terror struck to the Demo- | of Democratic principles. cratic heart. —The Republicans will spit out filthy slime from now until November about the anarchistic South and West, all because those sections have declared for Democratic doctrines. It is not so long ago, however, that these same blatant orators were gain- ing political supremacy in Congress by fu- sions with the Populists and were only able to organize the last Senate by dickers with the silver people. The Republican party, too, is responsible for the admission to the Union of most of the States that have grown these so called ‘‘anarchists.’” That work was done to secure the control in the Senate but it is proving an awful boomerang now. Call them anarchists. socialists, or whatever you please, they constitute the major portion of this glorious Republic and have her interests as deeply at heart as the monied East. —To those Republicans of the farming and laboring classes the WATCHMAN has this to say : It respects every man for having a conviction and living up to it. | It would far rather see a man vote any oth- er than the Democratic ticket than see him become so listless and disinterested in his government as to stay away from the polls on election day. believing as it does, yet conditions so pecul- iar have sprung into existence that it calls upon men of all parties to unite with it in | charge that the Democratic national con- It censures no one for not | the great fight of the masses against the classes, that is now on. whatever party need not he a Demo#rat to The poor man of | join with us. Let him be guided by the | principle that this is a government of the people and act in the direction whence he expects the most good for himself. When wealth is arrayed against the masses can there be any question as to where your in- terests lie ? > Ra BSNS ni | | | { i STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. ~ VOL 41 BELLEFONTE, PA., JULY 17, 1896. NO. 28. The Democratic Expression at Chicago. A new leaf in the history of American politics was turned in Chicago by the Democratic convention whose proceedings constituted an episode in the course of po- litical events that may give new life to popular institutions, and a new lease to the Democratic principles upon which this gov- ernment is based. The characteristics of that gathering, the spontaneity of its action and expression, the independence of its de- liverances, and its entire freedom from the control of managers and bosses, confer upon it distinction that can be attached to no other political convention that was ever held in this country. Great effort is being made to stigmatize it with the charge of populism, socialism, agrarianism and even anarchism ; but its greatest offense in the eyes of the pampered classes and protected interests that have so long enjoyed the special favors of govern- ment, is that it represented a popular up- heaval against the long continued discrim- inations in behalf of limited interests at the sacrifice of the general welfare. The meth- ods of such an indignant protest as that which was made at Chicago may present features that appear to be turbulent, and may embrace some characters that are ob- jectionable, but the actuating spirit of the movement, and the principle of popular rights that inspired and controlled every action of the convention, represented the very essense of Democracy. There may have been a departure from ancient forms, a departure required by the exigencies of the crisis, but no departure, whatever, from the undying principles of Democracy as es- tablished and enunciated by the great founders of the Democratic party. There is not a student of political history who is not aware of the fact that when the immortal JEFFERSON announced and en- forced those principles of popular right that constitute the basis of Democracy, he was denounced more bitterly and pictured more darkly than any of the men who are charged with giving an anarchistic and communistic character to the proceedings at Chicago. He was assailed by the old Federal sup- porters of aristocratic privilege as being a JACOBIN, an infidel associate of ToM PAINE, and a sympathizer with ROBEs- PIERRE, DANTOX and the other leaders of the French reigh of terror. What American citizen has not ‘reason to rejoice that the great JEFFERSON succeeded in imparting Democratic principles to our form of gov- ernment in spite of such detractors ? When the heroic JACKSON, the other great apostle of Democracy, broke the money power that aspired to control the government through the agency of the United States bank, he was denounced by the plutocratic potentates of that period as being as dangerous a char- acter as ALTGELD is now represented to be, and more mischievous in his purposes than TILLMAN. It cannot be denied that the Democratic crisis. . Though it may have the appearance of a new departure, yet as there is no ap- pearance of the sacrifice of a single Demo- cratic principle, but rather a reassertion of true Democracy in the vindication of justice to the many as against favors to the few, that which may look like a new departure will prove to be a new birth of Democracy if the members of the party remain trugg to their faith and steadfast in the maint ce Mischievous Advice. The height of impudence is reached when a paper like the New York Sun renders it- self officious in advising what Democrats should do in the emergency arising from difference of opinions in regard to the cur- rency. That mischievous journal, which betrayed the Democratic party and sacri- ficed Democratic candidates whenever ma- Jicious motives or mercenary interests prompted it to do so, now brazenly steps forward, as if it were a reliable Democratic journal, and offensively presumes to give advice to Democrats. As could be expected of so false an organ, it urges desertion from the regular party standard, and advises the stultification which Democrats would be guilty of by ar- raying themselves under the banner of Mc- KINLEYISM, which represents all the abus- es, corruptions and malfeasances that have impaired the public resources, injured the public credit, debased the public currency, and viciated every branch of the public service. Democrats are urged to such stultifica- tion and disgrace by the villainously false vention has made declarations and nomi- nated candidates that favor repudiation, threaten the monetary interests of the country, and imperil the credit of the gov- ernment, a charge that is an insult to every intelligent Democrat. When the Democratic party wants advice involving the question of duty to itself and to the country, it will not go for such coun- sel toa source that has been treacherous to it in every emergency. . ——Subseribe for the WATCHMAN. Hanna’s Deceptive Hedging. The great ground swell that is rolling, in favor of free silver, from the Alleghenies to the Pacific shore, and from the Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico, and which found such extraordinary and overwhelming expres- sion at Chicago, is giving great uneasiness to the Republican managers. They see in it an element of popular strength which greatly disconcerts the lofty and arrogant confidence with which they have regarded the issue of the pending contest. MARK HANNA is giving evidence of this uneasiness as was shown last week in an interview with California Republicans at Cleveland. The leader who was chiefly in- strumental in having McKINLEY placed on the Republican ticket, sees the danger of a free silver defection that will sweep thousands of Republicans from their alle- giance to the party ticket, and in order to counteract the probability of such a deser- tion he assured the California Republicans that “McKINLEY stands for bi-metallism,”’ and ‘‘that he (McKINLEY) will be a bet- ter friend to the free silver men than all the out-and-out free silver planks adopted by the Democratic and Populist conven- tions.”” He further assured these Califor- nia silver Republicans that ‘MCKINLEY recognizes the force of the free silver arguments,” and that those interested in the policy of free silver need not be ap- prehensive that it would suffer detriment at his hands as President of the United States. o It is true that MARK HANNA, previous to the nomination of McKINLEY, fully comprehended the strength of the free sil- ver doctrine and the immense hold it had upon the favor of the people, and that he did his utmost to prevent his candidate from being placed upon an out-and-out’ gold standard platform, but since the power and influence of the east- ern money changers, bank syndicates and gold speculators framed the Republican platform and committed the candidate to it, although much against his will, it is rank deception and downright dishonesty for MARK HANNA to assure free silver Repub- licans that the cause which they have at heart will not be sacrificed by the election of MCKINLEY. i The candidate of the Republicans has been placed on the platform of the heart- less money power of Wall street and the greedy beneficiaries of monopolistic protec- tion ; he is bound to a policy that has op- pressed the bulk of the American people and pauperized a large portion of them, and it is too late in the day for his manager to attempt any more straddling of the mo- mentous issue involved in the pending con- test. A Strange but True Doctrine. One of the best hits in candidate BRY- AN’s speech that had such a magnetic effect upon the Chicago convention, was his allu- sion to the charge that is always made by the supporters of the Republican tariff and money policy that those who oppose that policy disturb the business of the country. Mr. BRYAN said to those who hold this view : ‘“When you come before us and tell us that we shall disturb your business in- terests, we reply that you have disturbed our husiness interests by your course.” In their arrogant view of what consti- tutes the business interest, the supperters of MCKINLEYISM see no other business worth considering than that of the money dealer and the protected capitalist. If a policy is proposed that conflicts with Wall street interests, or that threatens to with- draw the discrimination that ‘has been made in favor of a special class, the public ear is assailed by the clamor that the busi- ness interes# are being disturbed. This limited application of the term has been accepted in ‘all recent public measures relating to business, whether they have been connected with fiscal questions or the currency. The only business men consid- ered have been those who operate in the stock exchange, draw bank dividends, make a monopoly of transportation, ‘‘cor- ner’’ the natural products of the country, and grow rich from the monopolistic con- trol of the prime necessaries of life through the agency of trusts. No other businessin- terests than these are contemplated in the McKINLEY policy, and no other has been provided for by Republican legislation. Candidate BRYAN calls a halt on this one-sided view of business interests and business men, complacently entertained by the class whom it favors. He declares that a policy so decidedly partial in its benefits has disturbed the interests of such business men as those who work for wages, and earn their living, whether in the work shop, on the farm, before the furnace fire, on the railroad track, in the factory, or in the mine. This may be a doctrine strange and start- ling to those who have been accustomed to limit their view of:‘‘business interests’ to a special and favored class, but it is the doctrine that inspired the Chicago conven- tiop, and is represented by WILLIAM JEN- NINGS BRYAN as the Democratic candidate for President. The Cause of the Popular Upheaval. There_could net he a more Democratic demand than that made in the Chicago platform for the imposition of a tax on in- comes, and nothing could be farther from the truth than the charge made by such papers as the New York Sun and Philadel- phia Record that the demand for such a tax emanates from a communistic and agrarian spirit. ; If the assertions of those papers were to be believed it would be thought an out- rageous piece of anarchism to require that the wealth of the country should bear its due share of the burden of maintaining the government, and that the fairest and most equitable tax that could possibly be desired was a monstrous scheme of communistic conspirators, prompted by their hatred for the thrifty class of people, and designed to plunder the wealthy. : Let us examine the utter fallacy and folly of such an assumption. It is false to assume that such a taxis intended as a punishment for being rich, its exaction emanating from an agrarian hostility to wealth. Yet this is the cry of those who are denouncing an income tax as a popu- listic and communistic measure. May it not more truly be called a just require- ment that those who are amply endowed with means should proportionately pay their share of taxation? Was it through populistic, communistic and agrarian influences that an income tax has long been one of the principal sources of revenue to the English government ? Although a monarchy England taxes the in- comes of its wealthy classes, making them do their share in supporting her govern- ment according to their means, while in this republican country, which boasts of having a government of the people and for the people, the masses are compelled to bear the burden of government taxation through the medium of tariffs levied upon the necessaries of life, while the mere offer to put a part of the tax exaction upon the superfluous wealth of the AsTors, VAN- DERBILTS, GOULDS and others of that class of plutocrats, is denounced as springing from an envious and malicious spirit of populism. But is this not in keeping with the entire policy of class favoritism that has grown up under Republican influence ? Does it not represent the true spirit of MCKINLEY- 18SM under which taxes upon wealth have been eliminated from our sources of reve- nue, tariffs have been levied upon the necessities of the common people, trusts and monopolistic combinations have been fostered by fiscal regulations that are false- Iy represented to be intended for the pro- tection of labor, courts and legislatures have been prostituted to the base service of powerful corporations and greedy capital- ists, and the currency is so regulated as to contribute to the aggrandizement of the wealthy stock operators and banking syndicates that control the money market ? We leave it to any candid and intelligent American whether this is not the situation in this country, whose government is sup- posed to be run in the interest of the peo- ple, and we ask whether it is surprising that such a state of affairs has, at last, ex- cited a feeling that is moving the masses in all sections of the country ? Sham Apprehension. After the nomination of BRYAN at Chi- cago an incident occurred in Wall street, New York, that is rather trying to the pa- tience of sensible people, and disgusting to the honest sentiment of the country. The members of the stock exchange, as heart- less and insatiable a set of gamblers as ever swindled their victims, worked themselves into a frantic demonstration of horror over what they called the triumph of BRYAN and anarchistic populism in the Democrat- ic convention, and gave vent to pretended alarm at the ruin that would be brought upon the country if the ‘‘dangerous ele- ments’’ that are supporting free silver should triumph in the coming presidential election. The people thoroughly understand what are the interests of these gambling opera- tors in stocks, and manipulators of the money market for their own advantage, and they know that when characters of that kind make such a demonstration against the Chicago platform and ticket, and or- ganize themselves into a ‘‘Bankers’ and Brokers’ MCKINLEY campaign club’’ irre- spective of party, they are merely acting to maintain that system of monopoly and agrandizement which has brought the coun- try under the control of trusts and combi- nations that have not only oppressed labor and robbed consumers, but have been chiefly responsible for the existing mone- tary system being converted into an instru- ment that serves the purpose of their rapac- ity. It is these Wall street cormorants, acting with other agencies of MCKINLEYISM, that have aroused the spirit of resistance to pro- tected wrong and oppressions, a spirit which had its culmination in the action of the Chicago convention and which these insatiable rascals are trying to stigmatize with such opprobrious terms as populism and anarchism. The Hon. Chauncey Black, Philospher. From the York Gazette. ‘‘The House of Want is arrayed againt the House of Have.”” In these words Henry George, the greatest of all political economists, briefly summed up the situation yesterday. The convention, and through it the Democratic’ party, was in control of the representatives of those who have long felt them selves the victim of injustice and who, however blindly, had made up their minds to act. That this should have come to pass is not unnatural. Few men can reason, but all men can see. The mass of men are poor, and for them life is a mere struggle for ex- istence. A small minority of men are rich and growing richer. There is a class that toils and toils and has not, and there is a class that toils not but has. It is plain there is something wrong. Who is to blame? Are we to marvel that eventu- ally those who have not rise and say to those who have : ‘You are responsible ?”’ And is it strange when those who have, with una- nimity, say : ‘“We are for gold,”’ that those who have not should respond ; ‘“Then it is plain that that is the very thing we ought not to he for? Is it indeed wonderful that anything, good or bad, supported by the House of Have should be opposed by the House of Want? Nor could the open rupture be averted. We may protest that the attack has fallen at the wrong spot, we may deprecate its al- most virulent character, but we can no more deny the justice back of the blind de- mand for relief that we can ignore the popular strength of that demand. Let the House of Have rejoice that the warring, chaotic and desperate elements which largely constitute the House of Want have found a voice and a head in such a man as William Jennings Bryan, of Ne- braska’ He is no Tillman, no Altgeld. Though he is against ‘‘the powers that be,” no man has a better appreciation than he of the value and necessity of good government. But what is good government?" It was not with words of anarchy or threats of ven- geance that he won the hearts and minds of the vast audience that listened to his matchless zloquence on Thursday after- noon, but it was the sincerity, the devotion and the great heart of the man that carried conviction to the convention and made him the nominee. To this man there is more in the issue now raised than a matter of coinage. To every Democrat, to every citizen, will come the question : ‘‘On which side shall I be in the struggle which has now opened and which will not end with this year? Shall I follow the lead of this man and help to fight the battle of the masses, or shall I fall in behind McKinley under the banner of the classes ?”’ We are told that the only question involved is a financial 6hé, but the very men who say this, know that, impor- tant as it is, that issue is but incidental in the great struggle now just beginning. There will now be an alignment. The masses will find who are their real friends. We do not mean to belittle the financial issue. It is of such genuineness of the Dem- ocracy of sound money Democrats will be put to a fearful test. There are those who are glad that circumstances have forced the test. We are for Bryan. Abuse that Helps the Silver Men. From the Pittshurg Post. Heretofore it has been held by the Re- publican press, and much capital made thereof, that any kindly expression of feel- “ing by the English press as to Cleveland or any other Democrat, or any question of Democratic policy, was strong argument that they should be condemned as anti-Am- erican and adverse to the best interests of the American people. We never took much stock in argument of this sort, but how the Republicans did glorify over and utilize it. How is it now ? The abuse of _ the Demo- cratic national convention at Chicago, of the Democratic candidates and policy of the English press, from the great ‘‘Thun- derer’’ down, eclipses anything they have ever said in all their impudent inter- meddling in American affairs. They make out of the great national convention a con- vocation of anarchists and socialists, proba- bly impelled thereto by the very decided anti-British tone of the speeches and plat- form. Vanderbilt's chief-of-staff, Chauncey Depew, is in London to give them pointers and gather up and indorse their bitter ex- pressions of hatred toward that great sec- tion of the American people represented at the Chicago convention. This talk of the British press of anarchy and socialism being the predominating characteristics of the Chicago convention or the Democratic party is an infamous slan- der born of prejudice and ignorance. While indifferent to what is said abroad, sensible people think this sort of talk had better stop at home. It doesn’t scare anybody, and only inflames hatreds and bitterness. The time has gone by when a great party can be stricken down by epithets and vile names. People of common sense, good judgment and a reasonable share of intel- ligence know that there was neither social- ism nor anarchy at the Chicago convention. There was a profoundly earnest feeling moving delegates and spectators, but it had its origin on American farms and in Amer- ican workshops, as the voting will amply demonstrate when the time comes. To set down vast majorities of the people of States and sections as anarchists because their opinions do not agree .with the opinions held in other sections is not a good way to convince. It will inflame and anger. Such palpable injustice and wrong had a great deal to do with letting loose the free coin- age tidal wave.” Keep it up and it will have the same effect on the November voting. The American people can neither be tickled by a straw nor frightened by a bogy man. RY. ——The Prohibition county convention will convene here on July 28th. Present Democratic county auditor and future Pro- hibition candidate for Assembly, H. Wilbur Bickle Esq., will be on hand, if the prolific crops he has on his Marsh creek farm do not completely exhaust him in their gar- nering. rr r—————— Spawls from the Keystone. —A train struck Michael Kees, of Reading, and took off both legs. —Bitten by a snake some time ago, John Zerfass, of Kutztown, became violently in- sane. —F. W. Klingensmith has been appointed postmaster at Dime, and Miss A. M. Rodgers at Demmler. —The Sheridan troop, of Tyrone, was pre- sented with a handsome new flag by the Mor- rison-Cass paper Co. —A regularly-organized gang of burglars keep the people of Phoenixville in a contin- ual state of excitement. —While on a visit to her sister Mrs. Alice Stevenson, of Philadelphia, died suddenly in a Newtown drug store. —The Rawson steel manufacturing com- pang, of Philadelphia, with a capital of $50,- 000, has been granted a charter. —During She funeral of ex-mayor Edraund H. Turner, 1n Altoona, all business houses were closed by proclamation of mayor Barr. —James Hartline, of Columbia, made two attempts at suicide, by jumping from a bridge to the ground, and by trying to drown him- self. —Workmen are constructing the link be- tween the North Penn railroad, the Ply- mouth valley branch and the Reading rail- rord near Ambler. —Theé Bucks county Lutheran orphan- age will be built in one of the following places: Boyertown, Kutztown, Montello, Sinking Springs or Topton. —While whittling a piece of wood with a butcher knife, the knife slipped, and Charles I. Gearhart, of Reading, received a wound from which he bled to death. —An exchange says a horse shoe suspended over the door for luck, fell recently and striking a child on the head caused a doctor bill which footed up to thirty dollars. —After a long chase, which included a long sensational swim across the Delaware, Detective Wharton, of Bucks county, cap- tured John Matlack, a negro desperado. —The Pennsylvania Millers’ state associa- tion will hold a convention at Williamsport in the near future. It is understood that the convention will be patronized by prominent men from different parts of the country. —Clearfield lodge of Odd Fellows will be fifty years old August 17th, and the members propose celebrating the event by holding a basket picnic and inviting all the lodges in the county to participate in the festivities. —The army worm is creating havoc with the oat-fields near Penbrook, a few miles from Harrisburg. Several acres have heen ging trenches to stop the progress of the worm. —The Buffalo and St. Mary’s railroad, run- ning from Clermont to St. Mary's, is now complete, the last spike having been driven a few days ago. This line will connect the coal fields of Shawmut with the railroads en- tering Clermont. —On Monday George Bahl, the lumberman was found ten or twelve feet from the point where he was drowned. It will be recalled that the deceased fell in Lycoming creek on February 10, while breaking a landing for Chilson, a woodsman found the body. —A committee has been appointed by the survivors of the gallant 8ith Pennsylvania regiment to secure the erection of a monu- ment to Col. William G. Murray, which will be placed at the west front of the court house at Hollidaysburg, not far from the beautiful soldiers’ monument dedicated last month. —The meeting of the Bucktail association, made up the original Kane Rifles, known as the Old Bucktails, will be held this year in Emporium, Cameron county, Wednesday and Thursday, August 26 and 27, as we are in- formed by the secretary of association ; Wm. H. Ranch, 1948 Camac street; Philadelphia. —At Bloomsburg Joseph Shaffer was found drowned in the creek by a number of boys who were fishing. The man had committed suicide the day before by jumping into the stream. A large stone was tied to his neck. He was 30 years old and is survived by a wife and two children. Family troubles is sup- posed to have been the cause of the act. —At South Renovo, Saturday, 5-year-old Levada Ball, daughter of Edwin M. Ball, while playing at housekeeping in the yard attempted to start a fire in an old stove by lighting a piece of paper. The paper burned so rapidly that the child dropped itand a gust of wind blew it against her dress. Her clothing was ignited and she was terribly burned. She died that night. —Friday afternoon Brakeman Kizer and a friend named Johnson, of Renovo, went to the mountain on the south side on a short outing. The Newssays that Mr. Johnson fell asleep while lying on a blanket and was awakened by experiencing a smothering sen- sation. Leaping to his feet he found that a black-snake had wound itself around his neck, and was going through wonderful gy- rations not pleasing to the trainman’s feel- ings. Mr. Johnson succeeded in releasing himself from the embrace of the reptile, and he and his companion lost no time in aband- oning their ‘‘ideal’, retreat. —Judge Simonton of Harrisburg, in an opinion in three cases involving a construc- tion of the fee bill of 1893, allows constables 5 instead of 10 cents a mile for traveling ex- penses in serving papers and reduces the fee for subpeenas from 50 cents to 15 cents. He allows-a fee for one warrant in criminal cases for both the alderman and constable, no mat- ter how many defendants, and a fee for one commitment in criminal cases for both alder- man and constable, no matter how many de- fendants. The fee for an information before an alderman or justice is cut down from 60 cents to 50 cents. —Last Friday, William, better known as “Doc’’ Moore, had a narrow escape from ser- ious accident, while walking across the rail- road bridge over the creek near Flemington. Being defective in hearing, he did not notice an approaching train, until he was too far from the one end to make the other side. He jumped off the bridge to the end of one of the piers. After the train had passed, he was so oocupied in his efforts to crawl bk on the superstructure that he did not sec an- other train closely following the first. The the pier. His dog, however, was struck by one of the trains and was killed. the Emery lumber company. Charles T. - second time he was compelled to jump on to . completely devastated. The farmers are dig- - ~ i