en ——————— tejnran BY P. GRAY MEER. Ink Slings. —Those who mistake that Methodist SwarLLow for a ‘‘gilli-loo’” bird are not close students of ornithology. —Governor HASTINGS has vetoed the resolution requiring the employment of none but Pennsylvanians on the building of the new capitol. —The next thing WEYLER will be after theL. A. W. to help him wear the road smooth between Havana and the territory occupied by the Cuban patriots. —About the most creditable thing the state Legislature has done, this session, was to sit down on such a fool measure as the prevention of foot ball in the State. —1Tt is a pity that Greece isn’t powerful enough to lick every power that is inter- fering in Turkey’s behalf. If she were, howefer, the unspeakable Turk would ave few friends. —The Cretan situation remains unchang- ed. Greece still defies the powers and they talk war with far greater ferocity and less intention to fight than CORBETT and FITZ- SIMMONS ever did. —It is generally supposed to be rich living that gave ex-President CLEVELAND the gout, but itis a well established fact that poor living is what gave the party he represented the go(o)ut. —T. P. RYNDER’S Erie Echo is just now busying itself with a movement to divide Pennsylvania into two States. It is very likely that the Echo will be the only thing that is busied much in such a movement. —And now they want to cram SMULL’S Hand Book into the heads of hygienic, calisthenic, industrial art beridden public school children. Why not include the Legislative Record and kill them off in an easier manner. — With only a boundary line between the States 70,000 persons are starvinggin Chicago while corn can’t be sold at 9 cents a bushel in Iowa. Prosperity, well dost thou hide thy head in the face of economic conditions that can make such a result pos- sible. — Philadelphians are still crazed with the notion that the capitol ought to be moved to their city. There is one thing that would be corrected if such a move were made : English papers that insist in asserting that Pennsylvania is in Philadel- | phia would not be guilty of making such | blundering geographical mistakes longer, | for the State would then surely be swallow- ed up in that city. —When the whistles began blowing and the bells began ringing to celebrate McKINLEY’S oath of office taking, at noon, yesterday, lots of Bellefonte Republicans tumbled pell-mell into the streets not knowing the cause and thinking a fire was | burning the town down. Well, there was a tire, But it was out: It was GROVER, And it was a ease of fire out. —The fellow who flagged the McKINLEY special, as it was speeding through West- moreland county, Monday night, says he thought it was the Greensburg accommoda- | tion, known to travelers as the ‘‘bummer.”’ A fine coincidence, indeed. That promised McKINLEY train | flagged, somewhere, for four months now i : | and it is signiflcant that the train hauling | its engineer should have been mistaken for the ‘‘bummer.”’ query as to whom he thought would he the next Democratic presidential nominee, present conditions prevailing, MATT SAv- AGE, secretary of the Democratic State Central committee, concluded his belief that BRYAN would be the man by saying : “The people are thinking. but not work- | What oceans of truth there are in | ing.’ that trite sentence and their mighty waves will sweep McKINLEYism out of existence four years hence. —If the news of to-day were hurried back into the musty depths of mythology old DAN TUrCKER would doubtless sadly | shake his head as he read the news of the forming of a corn-stalk trust. In DAN’S days there was but one use to which the corn stalk was put and that was in mak- ing fiddles that he was wont to scrape with a shoe-string bow. Now a company has been formed, with a capital of $50,000,000, to extract a pitch from them that will be used as a sheathing for war vessels. —If Legislators would busy themselves seeing that the laws that have already been enacted are enforced, instead of trying to gain notoriety by the introduction of fool measures, they would serve the people bet- ter and disprove the growing belief that most of them are birds of the long-eared, rope-tail variety. The idea of passing laws making it a crime to publish accounts of prize fights, pictures of unwilling subjects, ete. Why they might just as well pass a law prohibiting the publication of news- papers at all then the poor editors would have time to run for the Legislature too. —One of the last official acts of Presi- dent CLEVELAND was to veto the immi- gration bill. He did that on Tuesday after- noon hecause he thought the provisions of the measure too harsh. According to his idea the conditions that made the settle- ment of America an asylum for all peoples still obtain and they should be just as wel- come to-day as they were when the Ply- mouth colonist landed. The President does not seem to have deemed the crowded condition of that asylum as sufficient cause for relieving it by restricted immigration. of prosperity has been | Teme » SE VOL. 42 STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. NO. 9. BELLEFONTE, PA., MARCH 5, 1897. McKinley’s Cuban Policy. WILLIAM MCKINLEY is now President of the United States. It is quite clearly understood what will be his economic policy. The name MCKINLEY is the syn- onym of tariff, and there is not the slight- est probability of his going back on his protection record. As to his monetary policy t here is not the same certainty. He had a strong leaning towardssilver, previous to his nomination, but it is not likely that the influences which had so much to do with his election will allow his administra- tion to desert the interest of the goldbugs. But what will claim his immediate atten- tion is the Cuban question, which has been handed over to him by his predecessor in a very unsatisfactory condition, and the man- ner in which he will treat it is a matter of great interest to the people. We have the authority of the New York Journal, which, however, is not the best authority as to what are President Mc- KINLEY’S intentions, that he has com- municated to a representative of that paper what his Cuban policy will be. From this source the public is given to understand that the MCKINLEY administration will not interfere with the Spanish operations, nor meddle with the insurrection, but will fur- nish adequate and absolute protection to American citizens in Cuba. If there shall be any outrages perpetrated upon any citi- zen of the United States in Cuba it will be promptly redressed, even if it shall require hostile action to do it. If President McKINLEY will do this it will be all that treaty obligations and in- ternational law will allow him to do, but if he should do less, he would come short of doing his duty. Moreover, if the Con- gress of the United States should, by delib- erate resolution, recommend the recogni- tion of the belligerent rights or the inde- pendence of the insurgent people of Cuba President McKINLEY would be remiss in his duty if he should not do his part in carrying such resolution into effect. In political and economic questions we | ara not likely to agree with the new Presi- | dent, but we would be greatly pleased to 'see him adopt a manly and courageous, but fair policy in regard to Cuba. The Fight is Not Done. Contrary to the fatuous belief of the gold- ites after the election that the cause of free i silver had been crushed by the result of the ey of the constitution still goes on. There is no abatement of the efforts nor weaken- ing of determiniation of those whose pur- | currency from which it was deposed by the | . . . | crime of demonetization. | an address he made in New York last week, | said, “‘I want to say to those who have fought for free silver that the fight is not done,” hecemployed an almost needless expression. The very nature of the con- | cannot stop until a great wrong shall have satisfied. It is not out of place for the gal- lant leader of the free silver cause in the recent contest, to declare that ‘‘the fight is supporter of that cause who, after the de- ed that the fight had just begun. Nothing could have been more stolid { than the belief of the goldbugs that the | purchased result of the presidential election | —a verdict that had been secured by the | corrupt expenditure of millions of dollars— | had put an end to the contention for the | ‘money of the constitution. There was never anything so foolish as the belief of the bank syndicates, money lenders, and bond dealers, that the conviction of six millions and a half of voters, as expressed at the ballot box, would be abandoned after having been outvoted through such corrupt agencies. are in revolt against the iniquitous oppres- sion and financial injury of the gold stand- ard are more determined than ever. The gold contractionists are beginning to dis- cover that this is the fact, and they will make the further discovery that as time advances and continues its development monetary policy, the strength of the free silver force will correspondingly increase until the wrong of silver demonetization shall be righted by the ballots of the peo- ple. =. ——A hill has been introduced in the Minnesota state Legislature providing for the suppression of female fools, such as the ones who send flowers, angel-cake and plush bound volumes of KEATS to con- demned wife beaters and murderers, unless they be near relatives. Now if some broth- er Legislator would introduce a bill in the Minnesota Legislature for the suppression of fool Legislators the people of that State and many others would be spared the ignominy of finding themselves represented by men of such light calibre. The fools who pamper depraved convicts are to be pitied, not legislated against unless it be by creating asylums where their mild forms of insanity might he treated. ‘presidential contest, the fight for the mon- | : s : . | pose is to restore silver to its place in the | When WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN, in| tention will not admit of its cessation. It | Tn answer to the New York World's been righted and a great public necessity | not done,’” but there is not an intellicent | oS feat of last November, was not fully assur- | | The fact is that the spirit of those who | of the disastrous effects of their constrictive Defective Cuban Policy. There has been an unfortunate, if not culpable, weakness on the part of the au- thorities at Washington in their protection of American citizens in Cuba against Span- ish outrages. Evidence is abundantly at hand to prove that Americans have been subjected by the Spaniards to ill treatment of the most brutal character. Spanish ill will towards every thing American has not been confined to personal insult, but it has, in numerous cases, assumed the more outrageous form of imprisonment and capi- tal punishment. Consul General LEE has been a witness of these indignities and injuries to Amer- ican citizens at the hands of the Spanish authorities. He has protested against them, and given his own government no- tice of their perpetration. In this he has done his duty, but while his protests ap- pear to have been indifferently treated by the Spaniards, the information he has given the authorities at Washington has not been followed by that prompt and de- cisive action which should be looked for when American citizenship has been out- raged by a foreign power. There has been an evident absence of that support which Consul General LEE had a right to expect in his treatment of the Ruiz case. He urged immediate and vigorous action. He demanded an incisive investigation that would go right to the bottom of the horrible circumstances of Ru1z’s death, which bore so strongly the appearanee of his having been driven to death, in his lonely prison cell, by brutal means. He required of the Spanish au- thorities the exhuming and examination of the body so that it might be determined by what means his death had heen produced. The Spaniards shuffled with this demand and evaded it by claiming that Ruiz had committed suicide, but the Washington authorities should have given the Consul General the most vigorous backing in his efforts to get at the bottom of this dark case. This, however, they do not seem to have been done, as would appear from Gen. LEE’S dissatisfaction with the support he has received from his superiors. There must have been some remissness at head- quarters when an officer of Consul General LEE’s fidelity and honor found himself placed in a situation that almost induced him to abandon his post. We are regretfully forced to the conclu- sion that in some most essential respects | the course which ex-President CLEVELAND | pursued in his Cuban policy was lament- ably weak and far from being creditable. He may have found in the rules of inter- | national comity and in the obligations of | treaties with Spain ample justification for not interfering in the contention between .Spain and her revolting Cuban subjects, but surely neither the law of nations nor | the restraint of treaties required him to he Lindifferent and inactive when American {citizens were being subjected to outrages by the brutal minions of the Spanish gov- ernment. It looks very much as if the late Presi- | dent was as unfortunate in his Cuban as in his monetary policy. This Is Financiering for You. The report of the Bellefonte borough | treasurer discloses a condition of affairs in | the borough finances that is anything but a credit to the Finance committee of coun- cil. According to his statement the bor- ough sinking fund has been drawn upon and, even now, is depleted more than half of its amount in payment of running ex- penses. When the sinking fund was cre- ated it was designed to be set apart entire- | ly from use until the time for redeeming | the borough bonds shall come. Instead | the amount has been repeatedly encroached | upon until now not half of it remains in | the treasurer's hands, while a debt burdened | borough is the horrower. Why council should have authorized the i use of sinking fund money is a (uestion that will appeal to everyone who knows the purpose for which it was created. If the taxes are insufficient to maintain the borough expenses levy larger ones, but do not set aside a stipulated sum every year then turn around and use it up again. When it becomes necessary to make up | this deficiency in the sinking fund what will have to he done? A higher millage will have to be assessed or expenses cut down and for doing that future councilmen will be censured for the short sightedness that seems to have ruled the last body. One can readily imagine how fast the sinking fund will grow when money is tak- en out of it for current expenses, then the interest, due it on such loans, is taken out of it to be paid back and we would not he surprised if the money for the last appro- priation of $2,000 to the fund is taken from it also. If we are to have a sinking fund let it remain a sinking fund, undisturbed, and when the borough’s receipts do not meet expenditures curtail the latter or levy more taxes. -—=Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. The State Administration Stirred Up. Preacher SWALLOW, editor of the Penn- sylvania Methodist, has stirred up the official menagerie at Harrisburg with along pole and set the animals to lashing their tails and howling ferociously. This he has done by setting forth, categorically and circumstan- tially, a long array of charges against the state officials, including executive, legisla- tive and departmental functionaries, which charges, if true, would render them amen- able for maladministration, malfeasance, and almost every other form of offense which public officials could be guilty of. If the reverend accuser wassure of his proof, and hadn’t it ready to hand, he cer- tainly started out in a hazardous adven- ture when he made such direct and sweep- ing accusations. It is certainly no light matter to publicly assert, through the me- dium of the press, that money has been paid out of the state treasury to parties who rendered the State no service; that re- ceipts have been required to be signed for two, three and even four times as much money as the parties signing them received for service rendergd the State; that the State has been robbed in the furnishing: of the public buildings at Harrisburg and in the supplies for the Soldiers’ Orphans’ schools ; that in the purchases of material and labor for making additions to the capi- tol building, Governor's mansion, and work done on the capitol grounds, even in- cluding the alterations in Grace church now used by the Legislature, the cost to the State has been two, three, four and even eight times as much as it should have heen. the excessive profits having been di- vided aniong certain officials ; and lastly that the burning of the capitol was not en- tirely an accident. These are very bold charges and Rev. SWALLOW must have the courage of his convictions in making them. The entire state government appears to be included in his bill of indictment. To say that the implicated parties are howling mad would be using a term that would inadequately describe their feelings. They propose to crush the offending preach- er from the word go, and therefore he was promptly brought before the investigating committee that is working on QUAY's great - >form job, and after recciving a se- vere overhauling, was informed of the pen- alty he might expeet for libelling the Re- publican managers of the state government. This treatment was supplemented by prose- cutions brought against him for defama- tion of official character by members of the state administration, from Governor HAsT- INGS down to custodian DELANEY. This may be an ebullition of virtuous indigna- tion, or it may be mere bluff. Time will tell. If Rev. SwALLOW is sure of his charges and can prove them he will do the people of the State a great service. If he has made his charges at random, basing them merely upon the general belief that the state gov- ernment is a rotten affair, and fails to sub- stantiate them hy proof, he may have got- ten himself into a serious scrape. The im- plicated parties will show him.no mercy. Let us hope that the right side in this issue will win. Convicted by Thelr Reputation. It seems almost incredible that there are American journals that act as apologists for the atrocious conduct of the Spandiards in Cuba, in their treatment of American pris- oners, but there are publications that en- deavor to make it appear that the reports of such outrages are gross exaggerations, and in most cases are the inventions of in- terested Cuban partisans and sensational newspapers. The fact that the indignant protests of Consul General LEE have been excited hy these atrocities, and that he has called for vigorous measures to check, if not to redress them, has no weight with the apologists as evidence of the truth of what is charged against the Spanish ruffians in Cuba. A Philadelphia paper, belonging to this apologetic class, is not willing to credit the reports of Spanish illtreatment of Ameri- cans for the reason that it cannot be- lieve that so brave and chivalrous and nec- essarily humane a people, as it makes out the Spaniard’s to be, could be guilty of the atrocities which they are charged with prac- ticing upon the American prisoners. Such talk as this is merely glossing the Spandiards’ true character. The Don may be to outward appearance a well mannered and chivalric personage but history has given repeated proof that he is capable of almost any cruelty and is restrained by no considerations of humanity when religious intolerance, political tyranny, or personal jealousy and suspicion prompts him to the commission of dark and bloody deeds. The fact is that the charges that have been brought against the Spandiards, in regard to their treatment of prisoners, whegher American or Cuban, find their strongest corroborations in the historic cruelty of the Spanish nature. ——If they do pass a law prohibiting spitting in public places what is a fellow going to do when he bites into” a” wormy chestnut, swallow it? “Our” Jim’s Reply to D. E. Democrat. In a recent issue we took the opportuni- ty of calling the attention of his Centre county constituency to the honors that were being bestowed upon Hon. JAMES ScHo- FIELD during this session of the state Legislature. There was nothing more than what might have been expected for such an agreeable gentleman, yet a correspondent in the Bituminous Record made the refer- ence an excuse for flinging insinuations of a dishonorable nature at Mr. SCHOFIELD. The WATCHMAN did not deem such an attack worthy of notice, in fact there hav- ing been nothing in Mr. SCHOFIELD'S course at Harrisburg to warrant it we in- tended to leave the matter drop, until the following communication was received. It will explain to the Philipsburg inquirer that Mr. SCHOFIELD needs no one to champion his cause and is only too anxious to have the public know any position he might take. whiie a Representative at Har- risburg : Editor WATCHMAN :—In a recent issue of 3 reputed newspaper, called the Bituminous Record, published at Philipsburg, the writer notices an uncalled for and slanderous at- tack on me in my official capacity, endeavor- ing to cast reflection on my political standing. In the first place, and to make a long story short, if the author of the attack on me in the Bituminous Record will do himself the honor to sign his actual name to any articles for publication or in a personal letter of in- quiry I will be only too glad to furnish him with all the information he or any of his as- sociates may desire. But so long as the above stated individual sails under a false and ficti-. cious cognomen, just so long it will be impos- sible for me to answer his inquiries. Come out from behind the bush, give us your name and open your warfare in the broad daylight of publicity, after which it will be possible for me to reply, but not be- fore. I never engage in a controversy or political warfare except in open public for the inspection and decision of all those con- cerned. In the mean time I am only too anxious to fully explain my political position. Yours truly, - JAS. SCHOFIELD. Harrisburg, Pa., Feb. 23th, '97. The Way Prosperity is Advancing. One of the folly lessons of the last. presi- dential campaign is just being learned hy the employees of the American Ax and TT: * company, at Mill Hall. Tast fall they were told that the only way to insure per- manent employment for themselves at good wages was to support the McKINLEY party. They did it, but are possibly be- ginning to suffer twinges of remorse al- ready, as the following communication will show. “A few days before the last presidential election the American Ax and Tool Co., at their factory, at Mill Hall, Pa., issued the following circular and gave one, in an en- velope, to each employee. “FELLOW CITIZENS: Employees of the American Ax and Tool Co., at Mill Hall, Pa. I congratulate you that notwithstanding the stagnation of busi- ness brought on our country by the Wilson tariff bill of the present administration, you have had steady employment, promptly paid for in money as good as gold and that there never has been a time since the manufacture of axes in Mill Hall, forty-five years ago, when a days’ labor would buy more of the necessaries and comforts of life than it will to-day. While you have been fortunate in having plenty of work up to the present time the prospects for the future are extremely dis- couraging. The orders of the American Axe and Tool Co., here, as elsewhere, are cancell- ed or withheld, so that there is no more work in sight awaiting the results of the coming clection. The platform of the Bryan party, boldly Spawls from the Keystone. —A Towanda jail commission has reported an allowance of 31 cents a day to the sheriff’ for feeding prisoners, a reduction of 14 cents. —Rev. J. M. Page, was insta!led Sunday morning by Bishop N. C. on, of the . oN . diocese of Central Pennsylvania, as rector of St. Luke's Episcopal church. Lebanon. —A special sermon was reached Sunday evening in St. Mark’s Reformed church, Lebanon, by Rev. I. Calvin Fisher, to Speed- well council, No. 920, Junior Order of Amer- ican Mechanics. —The furnishing committee at the Normal school Lock Haven Friday afternoon award- ed the contract for furnishing the new rooms at the Normal with oak bedsteads, mat- tresses, bolsters and springs to P. P. Rittman. The new rooms are in the recently built ad- dition and number sixty. The contract must be filled by March 25th. —A young man recently bargained with a Meadville merchant for a suit of clothes, and was permitted to take the suit home to try it on. He sent the clothes back the next day with a note stating that they did not fit, and about a week later the merchant dis- covered that the enterprising young man had simply borrowed the clothes to get mar- ried in. —Mrs. Margaret Cornealy, widow of the late John Cornealy, Spruce Creek, received word, Wednesday, that a pension of $8 per month has been granted her, and $2 per month also for a minor child. She will get $30.13 to start with. Mrs.. Cornealy has much need of the cash, and the news is there- fore very gratifying to her. —A pine tree was recently cut at a lumber job near Brockwayville which was a veri- table giant of the forest. The tree which was forked, was 18 feet in circumference at the butt, and nearly six feet in diameter. Twenty-four good sawlogs were cut which scaled 5,846 feet board measure. At $15 a thousand, the market rate for log run pine, the tree will yield $87.66 worth of timber. —Joseph Flynn, a dyer in the woolen mill at Reynoldsville met with a shocking ac- cident while at work Friday morning. He was working around a tank of boiling water which is used for dying the raw wool, etc., and while thus engaged fell head first into the scalding liquid. He fortunately had the presence of mind to pull himself out, but as soon as he was exposed to the air his agony was heart-rending. —A serious accident befell Mr. Barner the tenant who resides on the farm of Newton Fredericks in Bald Eagle township, Clinton county. Mr. Barner was hauling logs, and was cither thrown off the wagon or was struck by one of the logs. His leg below the knee sustained a compound fracture, the bone protruding through the flesh. Dr. Ball was summoned. It is feared that amputation of the leg may be necessary. Mr. Barner is about 65 years old and has a family. —Frank Lergenmiller, who is employed in the liquor room at the Tyrone paper mill, received a pretty severe scalding Tuesday afternoon. A tank containing hot liquor sprung a leak and the fluid gushed against Lergenmiller’s breast and face. His left arm between the elbow and wrist is the most severely burned, but other parts of his body, face and neck are pretty badly scalded. He will probably be able to work in a week or two. —There is a bill before the Legislature which provides that each of the thirteen Normal schools in the state shall receive 315,- 000. They now get $510,000 and in former years they received large special appropria- tions. This year the principals of these in- stitutions, the Palriot says, have agreed that if they are assured an annual appropriation of #5000 they will not ask for special amounts. Two years ago over 31,000,000 was asked for and not allowed. —On Saturday morning a fire broke out in the business centre of Patton, doing con- siderable damage before it was extinguished. The fire was caused by the explosion of a lamp dropped by John Boice, and destroyed the building occupied by Boice & Anderson, E. J. Severn and Fisher's pool room. MH. Robinowitz's building, occupied by Mrs. Rook, dressmaking, and a number of tenants, and Adams & Stratafl”s building, occupied by the American Clothing company, with «a lodge room upstairs. The total loss 1s about $10,000, partly insured. —James B. Denworth, the convicted at- torney, who is serving sentence of three months on the charge of defrauding a widow of pension money, and who walked out of the Williamsport jail Saturday, surprised the sheriff by walking in again yesterday morn- antagonistic to the polices of the nation, ad- | ministered by the Republican and Demo- | cratic parties, is presented for your suffrage ! with the delusive promise of its orators that | they have a plan of giving you money that | you never earned. Do not be deceived by | these sophistries, they will surely lead you to | ruin, the only possible way of bettering your condition will be on the rising tide of pros- perity that will follow the clection of Wm. McKinley to the Presidency of the United States backed by a working majority in Con- gress. Yours truly, ROBERT MANN. | Mill Hall, Pa., Oct. 30, 96. : Now, on the first of March, three days be- fore MCKINLEY’S inauguration, they passed a notice of a reduction in the wages of their employees running from 8} per cent. to 20 per cent. affecting nearly the whole force of workmen. ONE oF THEM. Why Not Make it Thirteen and Include Mary Ellen Lease? | Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, | The New York Sun, asked to name ten | American women who will live longest in history gives this answer : ‘‘Martha Wash- ington, Rebecca Rolfe, (Pocahontas), Mol- ly Pitcher, Elizabeth Blackwell, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Priscilla Alden, Eliza Goose ( Mother Goose), Maria Mitchell, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Lucretia Mott.”” The num- ber ought to have been twelve so that Su- san B. Anthony and Theodosia Burr might be added. Americans will never cease to speculate upon the fate of Aaron Burr's beautiful and accomplished daughter. ——If you have any wires that can be pulled pull them to have the new peniten- tiary located at or near Bellefonte. The board of trade wants this done. Possibly some of the members will feel so guilty after having done something in this line for Bellefonte that they will have them- selves incarcerated, for conscience sake, when they get the ‘‘Pen.” in Centre county. ing. Mr. Denworth gave as his excuse for not returning the fact that he had gone home to see a sick child, and, lying down on a bed, fell aslecp. He left the jail in custody of a deputy, to answer a subpena, and was per- mitted to go home with his son. When the officers called at the house there was no answer to their rings, and the impression grew that Denworth intended to thwart the law. " —Augustine Medunty, a prisoner at the rc- formatory, was stabbed with a bread knife by a fellow prisoner at noon on Friday. Me- dunty was standing at the doorway, and as his companion approached him he kicked at him in play and ‘received the blow of the knife on his right leg. An artery was sever- ed, and the blood gushed out freely. The wound was closed and the blood stopped but not until he had lost so much blood that his life could not be saved. He died Sunday evening. Wilworth, the young man who did the cutting, is greatly distressed. Coroner Greenberg made an investigation that cleared Wilworth as it was proven that the boys were in play and that the stabbing was accidental. —On Monday night two Hungarians and an Italian became involved in an altercation while drinking at Root’s hotel in Beccaria near Houtzdale. They were all more or less under the influence of liquor and during the progress of the brawl the Italian drew a re- volver and began shooting. Both Hun- garians fell, one shot in the leg and the other in the hip. The wounds however are not serious. Tuesday morning the Italian was captured near Beccaria and taken to Madera to await the arrival of the afternoon train going to Clearfield. While the officer was at the window procuring tickets, his prisoner made a hasty exit to the woods nearby where he disappeared. His capture is not at all probable and tho county is thereby saved another large bill of costs. *