i iat GRAY MEEK. ink Sings, a P. —Poor Governor PINGREE, of Michigan, won’t be able to boss his own potato patches, in Detroit, now that that city bas turned down his candidate for mayor and elected a Democrat. —President McKINLEY is going to take a short trip down the Potomac for recrea- tion, you know. We do hope and pray that he wont cultivate a craze for duck shooting while away. —The King of Siam is on his way to visit the United States. He won’t prove as popular as Lt HUNG CHANG because he won’t have a yellow jacket, a peacock feather or a propensity for asking ques- tions. —The two young men who rode from New York to Philadelphia on horseback, on Saturday, in six hours and fifty-two minutts, would hardly feel like taking their meals from any other place than the man- tle for a few days. —VFlies and potatoes bugs have both put in their appearance. Sort of biological blue points that precede the plethoric ban- quet of prosperity puddings and wind sauces that MCKINLEY confidence will stuff the people with this summer. —The society girls of Springfield, Ohio, who are going to run a leading dry goods store in that city one day for sweet charity’s sake, will find the novelty quite exciting unless some one of their beaux takes it into his head to buy some underwear that day. —We were always under the impression that Ohio and Illinois were pretty clear of wooded areas but a comparison of the vote of Tuesday, with that of last November, proves that hosts of Democrats must have taken to the woods last year, Tor the re- turns now indicate that they are showing up from somewhere. —In Altoona they have a ball and chain gang and all the wandering WILLIES are forced to join it. The tramps are set to work in stone quarries under the super- vision of a man who is now complaining to council that the bad urchins of that city are making his job unbearable by calling him ‘hobo driver.”’ —The President made JoHN HAY an Ambassader need fora summer cottage in America. Ambassador HAY has tendered the Presi- dent the use of his cottage during his ab- ~ sence abroad and there are those who think the President really does know something about making hay while the sun shines. —The announcement that QUAY has “gone home to take a short rest’’ piques our curiosity to know what made him tired. Up to date no cause has been found for his physical or mental exhaustion unless i; might have been that ride back from Flori- da and DAVE MARTIN'S proclamation that he has retired as a Philadelphia boss. —Professor LucILA BLAKE, holding the chair of electrical chemistry in the Kansas University, has made the rather startling assertion that negroes can be made white by means of an electrical current. If such be the case the white negro will be almost as much of a curiosity as BARNUM’S white elephant and, probably, as great a fake. —The present Congress is making a rec- ord for getting away with things quick. It took only an hour or so, on Wednesday, to introduce a resolution appropriating $200,000 for the relief of Mississippi flood sufferers, pass it and get the President's signature to it. This plan of doing things quick would" be particularly acceptable if Congress would only follow it in the search for prosperity. —The plan of the state prohibition party leaders tomake the Rev. Dr. S. ¢. SWAL- Low their candidate for state treasurer will | appear as a full endorsement of his at- | tack on the administration and might great- | ly augment that party’s vote in the eam- | paign next fall. Dr. SWALLOW would | make an interesting object on the stump, | as he would be very apt tosaya few things under such conditions that he didn’t think | of when he was attacking that Harrisburg ! gang in his PonnaBurio J Methodist. —The new United States battleship | Towa was tried over the government prov- ing grounds, off the Massachusetts coast, on Wednesday, and by making seventeen knots an hour earned $200,000 in premi- ums for her builders. This is the last boat on which the government will offer premi- ums for excess “over contract speed, as the days of experimental ship building are sup- posed to be over. Itisa good thing, too, for the way ship builders have been ring- ing in on Uncle SAM of late years with their unexpectedly (?) speedy boats has heen enough to tie the bowels of the treasury in knots. —Not that they don’t need it, but it is a question whether the charity of the United States would be advisedly spent on Cretan and India sufferers. England is wholly responsible for the deplorable condition of the people of the latter country, while her greedy, colony grabbing propensities are largely to blame for the failure of a satis- factory adjustment of the troubles of the former island. She should render needed assistance to them instead of oppressing. The United States will have enough to do taking care of the Mississippi flood sufferers and if we are called upon we might do as England did for our ill-fated Johnstown 3 send our sympathy. and thus robbed him of his 2 | | | = Ae emacralic me} ie ’ e <. > % 2 Th VOL. 42 BELLEFONTE, PA., STATE RIGHTS AN b FEDERAL UNtoN. APRIL 9. 1897 7. The Popular Reaction. The local elections earlier in the sea- son, in New England and other sections, including our. own State, showing large Democratic gains, indicated a reaction from the November election, and were the fore- runners of the revulsion that was found to follow the election of McKINLEY. This change ‘in the political current is continued in the result of the town and city elections which came off in Ohio, on Monday, where there has been a most decided change from the majorities of last fall. Cincinnati, which gave a majority of 20,000 for Mc= KINLEY, in November, now elects a Demo- cratic Mayor by a plurality of 7,000. There is a Democratic gain of 2,000 in MARK HANNA'S city of Cleveland ; Can- ton, the home of MCKINLEY, goes Demo- ! cratic by a handsome majority ; Spring- | field, the home of BUSHNELL, reverses its Republican majority by electing a Demo- cratic Mayor ; in Columbus, the capitol of the State, MCKINLEY’S majority of 3,000 is wiped out, and other towns show a simi- lar change. These may be regarded by superficial ob- servers as local expressions that have but little significance ; but when they are seen to occur in widely separated sections of the country, in New England, Ohio, Michigan and Illinois, as well as in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York, as has been the case in the recent spring clections in those States, they may be regarded as the first in- dications of the reaction against the party that carried the presidential election last year. Such a reaction is unavoidable. It is bound to come. When a party has carried its point by gross deceptions practiced upon the people, and its promises turn out to have heen recklessly made and unfaithfully performed, its punishment at the hands of the people is sure to follow. The Decision Against Railroad Pooling, The anti-trust law, passed some years ago by Congress for the restraint of mo- nopolistic combinations, received its first recognition from the courts by the recent decision of the United States court which declared railroad pooling to be unlawful. There was always a way found to evade this kind of law, the expedients resorted to for that purpose having been usually assist- ed by the unfaithful prosecuting officers of the government, which were facilitated by the loose construction of the statute. It is a noteworthy circumstance that there has been much difficulty in enforcing this law against combinations of capital formed for the restraint of trade, which has been construed to include railroad pools, but the legal authorities have experienced no difficulty, whatever, and displayed no hesitation, in applying it to trades unions and other combinations of workingmen, and enforcing it against them. Capital, con- federated for the purpose of monopolistic extortion, has been allowed to escape | through the meshes of the anti-trust law, but the cqurts put such a forced construc- tion upon it as to bring within reach of its penalty the unions formed by workingmen for the protection of their interests. There was no impediment, whatever, to a decision i of the courts, after the Chicago riots, that the working people who had participated in | that difficulty had violated the law that | prohibited the restraint of trade, and to | facilitate its enforcement against members {of trades unions ; even the irregular method | of ‘injunction’ was resorted to. | It is remembered how the railroad com- | panies, and the great monied interests built up by monopoly, rejoiced over the enforce- ment of the law against workingmen who had interrupted trade, and denounced as | anarchists ev eryhody who didn’t view the action of the courts in that matter as they | did ; but now since there has been a de- | cision against the railroads; under this anti- trust law, the complaints from - capitalistic | quarters are loud and deep, and a Republi- | can Senator, FORAKER, of Ohio, hastens to offer a bill to relieve the railroads from the decision of the supreme court which ad- judged pooling to be a violation of the law against the restraint of trade. We donot contend that it may not be best for general business interests, and the regularity of trade, that there should be some restriction upon the freight cutting practiced among railroads, with the hostile purpose of undermining each other, when there is no agreement among them as to uniformity of rates, nor does such uniformi- ty, effected by pooling, constitute a com- bination in restraint of trade similar to that which is exerted by trusts that are formed to restrain competition in industrial productions, such as the Standard oil com- pany, the sugar trust, the beef trust, the coal combine, and not omitting the great gold trust that does business in Wall street. Wedo believe that railroad companies ought to have some latitude in preventing piratic- al freight cutting, which is inimical to a settled condition of the transportation busi- ness, and hence a drawback to general trade interests ; but the point we make is that when a law is passed that is adjudged to apply to laboring people, as well as to railroad companies, it is ungqual justice to enforce its penalties with precipitate haste against the one,- as in the Chicago cases, while the courts, in enforcing it against the other, move with a halting gait. JAN still An Unavailing Complaint. There was but little use for representa- tive McCALL, of Massachusetts, to kick against the exorbitant rates of the DiING- LEY tariff bill, which he did in the debate in the House on that measure. The lead- ers of his party had decreed that the inter- est of a special class of beneficiaries should be the chief object of the bill, and therefore it was idle for him to protest against duties which on account of their excessive char- acter could not stand, but ‘“‘would be an invitation to further agitation, and be the germs of a new reaction,’’ as he put it. It was pitiful and yet ludicrous to hear this Republican representativé complain about this scheme of spoliation, devised for the advantage of the trusts and similar monopolies, and driven through Congress regardless of the fact that such an extreme measure, as Mr. McCALL declared, was bound ‘“‘to put the country again through the crucible of tariff agitation,” and to place ‘‘the commerce and trade of this great country constantly in danger of change by tariff legislation.” The Massachusetts representative made his moan over this outrage upon the commercial peace and in- dustrial stability of the country, but never- theless voted for the hill, as did other Re- publican Members, who thought as he did, but had to submit to the DINGLEY whip. Representative McCALL's ‘greatest grief, as expressed in his speech, was that this insane sort of tariff legislation was caleu- lated to play into the hands of the Demo- crats. The Democratic party, he said, had not been killed by the last election, for, notwithstanding the fact that 1,000,000 Democrats voted for MCKINLEY, Mr. BrRY- received 6,500,000 votes” and therefore he declared it to be an act of folly for his party ‘‘to put weapons in the hands of its adversary,” by passing an ex- cessive tariff bill, ‘‘thereby alienating those splendid allies who came to us from the Democratic party.” If it be true that 1,000,000 Democrats voted for MCKINLEY, those ‘‘splendid allies”” whom Mr. McCALL doesn’t want to have alienated, must, by this time, be thoroughly disgusted with the buzzard’s feast which DINGLEY is serving up for them, with the probability that every one of them will be back in the Democratic ranks three years hence, with an increased determination to overthrow the party of tariff robbery. Strictly Jeffersonian. A Philadelphia contemporary that has always been inclined toward the Democratic party, but was foolish enough to allow itself to be switched off the Democratic track last year by the ridiculous fear that free silver would reduce its dollars to fifty cent pieces, comments upon the celebration of JEFFERSON'S birthday, in Washington, on the 13th inst., with the remark that ‘a good way to celebrate it would be for cer- tain followers of the level headed THOMAS to recant such anti JEFFERSONIAN heresies as they imbibed in last fall’s campaign.’ We are at a loss to know what anti-JEp- FERSONIAN heresies were imbibed by any who supported the Democratic presidential candidate and platform last fall. Was it in conflict with JEFFERSONIAN principles to support free silver? When was the “level-headed THOMAS" ever committed to gold monometalism ? When and where did he ever declare that gold should be"the ex- clusive standard money of the.country ? When did he say that silver should be so set to one side as a measure of value that a small class of bankers, composing a money trust, and controlling the gold market, should be able to control the money of the country? Where can it be found in any of his declarations or publica- tions that he regarded silver merely asa subsidiary currency, and that its free coin- age was a violation of the public faith and in effect repudiation ? If it can be shown that JEFFERSON en- tertained any such views in regard to silver, and that those who advocated its freejcoin- age conflicted with any of his principles and doctrines in regard to the constitutional money of the country, then it may be said that the free silver Democrats have some- thing to recant before they can properly participate in a celebration of JEFFERSON’S birthday. But they have nothing to recant, for on the currency question, and on every other point included in their platform last year, they planted themselves on strict JEFFERSONTAN principles. If JEFFERSON were alive to-day he would be shoulder to shoulder with WILLIAM J. BRYAN con- tending for the money of the constitution. i —It will bea trifle embarrassing to President MCKINLEY should he be called upon to sign the DINGLEY bill. That in- strument puts a higher duty on sugar than the WriLsox bill did and vhe fact that Presi- , dent MCKINLEY’S own law had that com- modity on the free list will make this DINGLEY change appear as a parade of the President’s failure to know what was need- ed when he was framing bills in]/Congress. ————— —— Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. The, Expenses of Quay Legislation. The Altoona Gazette has taken up the fight against the inevitable and has been mercilessly attacking QUAY methods in Pennsylvania with the hope of furthering holy JouN WANAMAKER’S chances to be made state treasurer. While there isslight chance of any other person getting a Re- publican state nomination, than one who has been touched hy the ‘‘old man’s’ fin- ger of preferment, these fights in the Re- publican ranks redound to the good of Pennsylvania in their exposals of the ex- travagant methods of Republicanism. Though the reckless waste of state money to create places for party workers has been shown, time and again, Pennsylvania tax- payers go on voting the robbers into power, year after year, with apparently no desire to put an end to extravagance that has re- duced the State toa condition bordering on bankruptcy. Everyone of these fights, however, bring about a certain amount of reformation and the Gazette hopes to check some of the Quay legislation that is con- templated at this session by encouraging the support of WANAMAKER, as the leader of a rival faction. While it is not our intention. to impugn the motives of our Altoona contemporary the public will be prone to believe that there is *‘a nigger in the wood-pile’” some- where. However this may be it is interest- ing to know just how the Quay people in- tend going about their plans for making places for henchmen at the expense of the State. The following list of places hope to accomplish and what it will cost. Three commissioners at £5,000 a year 315 000 Trave ling expenses 5 000 One chief examiner 3 000 One secretary J =, 2 000 Clerks, stenographer and messengers . 10 000 State prison commission : Estimated expense for com- mission, clerical force and general running expenses 50 000 Horseshocing board : Istimated expense 10 000 New capitol building commission : To be composed of fifteen members, estimated hotel, traveling and incidental ex- penses and clerk hire 15 000 Railroad commission : Salaries and Tam expenses, estimated 25 000 One additional stonoaratior and typewriter to the health officer of Philadelphia . .. 1 000 Bureau of geology and mines : Ixpenses of six commissioners 3 000 One state geologist ; 3 000 Two assistants © 3 000 A stenographer “1 600 State board of barbers : Five managers, i : 2 500 One secretary . . 600 Board of gas, clectric Hight and water com- mission : Three members 14 000 One secretary 3 600 Annnal ApD7peiakion § for ex- penses : 30 000 School book board : Expensesof board . . . . 500 Text book commission : Twenty- eight commissioners : $5 per day, puny anys . 4 200 Expenses : 5 000 Department of mines : ’ One commissioner 4 000 ive elerks . . . . 9 400 Apparatus and books 2 000 County health officers : Sixty-seven county health officers, average salary and expenses 40 000 Publication of Permsylvania archives Twenty volumes at 0 por volume 10 000 Estimated cost of BpAT tor compulsory physical educa- tion and gymnastics in every ’ public school + 250 000 Estimated cost of apparatus for : compulsory illustration of weights, and measures and . arithmetical tables 50 000 New fish sub-hatchery in Wayne county. os 3 000 3,000 copies State librar y cata- logue . . 3 000 Publication of one nr of Smull’s Handbook for each public school in the State 12 000 Publication of 12,000 copies of _ school laws and decisions 5 000 $598 400 Grand total per annum Arbor Day. To-day is Arbor day. What are you going to plant for your country and humanity ? With the terrible desolation of the Mississippi valley and the prospects of the total flooding of the cotton crop, we are obliged to face the fact that with us, alone, is the remedy. As long as our hills and mountains were covered with trees, floods and droughts were almost un- heard of. Now they devastate spring and fall, and summer and winter. Some one has aptly said: ‘When a woodsman fells a tree in-the North it costs a life in the South”, and you have but to read We have recklessly wasted our tim- ber until wood of every kind is getting scarce and much of the mountain-land is like unto a desert. In Denmark the law compels a man to plant two trees for everyone he cuts down, here he is given every licenses to deforest the land and the trouble is he can not be made feel the ef- fects alone. Now plant a tree, or a hundred if you have the land, and you will find that you have planted for yourself, | your family and your country. to be created will give an idea of what they | The Farmer's View of the Recent Shricy- alty Contest in Centre County. From the Patron—Non-Political. This is a dangerous precedent. Itis an easy thing to allege irregularity or fraud, when an election does not result as desired. Thirty petitioners may readily be secured setting forth presumptive fraud (as in this case, ) and under cover of the recent decree of the court placing the costs of contest upon the tax payers, involve us in constant trouble and annoyance. Besides it is a serious: charge to assert that the election officers of nearly half the precincts in ‘the county do not respect the sanctity of their oatlis, to hold the election fairly and hon- estly. If the court had placed the costs in the above case upon the petitioners, it would have had a restraining influence in the future, and made petitioners a little more careful in making allegations of ille- gality and fraud, From the decision of the court public opinion appeals. A FovesRunntr of a Bryan Tide. From the Lancaster Intelligencer. The success of the Democratic tickets in many municipal elections warrants the Intelligencer in expressing the liveliest sat- isfaction at the emphatic evidence thus given that the Democratic party is still the party of the people. Tts. triumph at no dis- tant day may be confidently expected. As a rule the results of municipal elections furnish no certain clue to the general drift of public opinion upon national politics, but in this case the Democratic gains are so decided and general that it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that the utter failure of the Republican campaign promises of sudden prosperity, and the stubborn pur- pose of more high tariff folly, have had their natural effect upon people who were frightened or bullied into opposition to the Democratic ticket last November. Yes, Charity Begins at Home. | From the Ww illiamsport Su Sun. Let England take care of her own starv- ing subjects in India. The people of the United States have enough to do in alle- viating the suffering of her own people in the flooded districts of the southwest. ing to oppress the Christians in Crete and shows little disposition to relieve the dis- tress of the people in India. Why should the United States trouble herself over the condition of a foreign nation, when she has tens of thousands of people within her own dominions who are homeless and destitute ? All the Old Feltows Are Getting in Line. From the Lancaster Intelligencer. Mrs. Schofield, on Sunday, presented Lieutenant General John M. ‘Schofield, 0. S. A. (retired), witha fine healthy ‘girl baby. General Schofield was retired 18 months ago on account of the age limit. He is now 66 years old. Mrs. Schofield, who is 32 years of age, was formerly Miss Georgia Kilbourne, of Keokuk, Iowa. The Schofields have been partied six years. Fails to Put in an A apearaiite. The prosperity that was to follow the election of Major MCKINLEY is proving it- self to be one of a most elusive character. It keeps in hiding when it ought to be beaming on the country with a benignant smile, and blessing the land with its bene- diction. was said to-be the advance agent, has not only failed to attend the advent of McCKIN- LEY’s administration, but business is flatter, money becomes scarcer, and the times most tration that was going to make everybody prosperous and happy. While prosperity lingers in its approach, the expectant tariff beneficiaries help to re- tard its progress by acting in a way that prevents its arrival on schedule time. They are beginning to cut the wages of the workmen in advance of the passage of the tariff bill from which they are going to de- rive such large profits. The proprietors of the big iron mills at Pittsburg have noti- fied their employes that a cut would take place on Monday, and this singular evi- dence of prosperity is to be resisted by a strike. There are similar evidences of prosperous times in the Clearfield region, where the men are on the verge of striking to resist a cut in mining rates and in other industrial localities, with the prospect of a repetition of the wage reductions, lock-outs and strikes that were so numerous when the fipst McKIN- LEY tariff was in operation. Now this may really be prosperity, but the working- men may be too obtuse to recognize it. Those who promised that flush times would follow MCKINLEY’S election find it difficult to explain why prosperity lingers on the way and fails to put in an appear- ance. They will find the explanation still more difficult after DINGLEY’S tariff goes into operation. ——The latest edition of the Clearfield | Public Spirigwas an eight page, handsomely of the terrible loss to know it is true. | illustrated and printed number that ap- peared last Friday, devoting almost the en- tire space of the paper to exploiting the town of Clearfield. The paper would be a credit to any office and Mr. SAVIGE may well be proud of a work launched so unos- tentatiously. ——The Magnet thinks that the fact that there are only ten natives of Centre county confined in the Danville asylum, is evidence that all of Cen- tre county’s crazy people are not at Dan- ville.” The Magnet is right. Great Britain is at present engaged in aid- | | The fact is that prosperity, of which he | perversely grow harder under an adminis- | Spawls from the Keystone. — Uniontown will have a new radiator fac- tory to cost $25,000. —The First National bank of Greensboro has authority to organize with $50,000 capital. —Citizens of Wilkesbarre will hold a mass- meeting to protest against increase in water rents. —Quay carried the Republican primaries at Bloomsburg, Berwick and Catawissa on Sat- urday. —York's police census gives that city a population of 25,613, an increase of 10,000 in ten years. —Easton’s mysteriously missed ex-chief burgess, Robert H. sick in New York. —Another blast furnace has been added to the various mills that have recently resumed operations at Steelton. —Before his hooks had been examined tax collector W. S. Ball, of Erie, committed suicide with strychnine. —Forillegal voting at a Democratic pri- mary Joseph Polluck was sent to jail for three months at Reading. —Bishop Breyfogel, who is about to depart for Japan, was given a fine send-off at the hands of Reading Evangelicals. —Henry W. Hey, of Shartlesville, Berks county, was instantly killed while attempting to board a train near Williamport. —Dr. Swallow stole a march on the state officials at Harrisburg and made a tour of the ruins of the capitol on Saturday. —Motormen and conductors employed by the Scranton railway company have disband- ed their union and will divide the $600 in its treasury. —On the ground that it had been secured by fraud the wholesale liquor license of Aaron D. Allwein, at Lebanon, was revoked by Judge Ehrgood. ’ —Rev. Solomon L. Rhoades preached a special sermen Sunday evening to Sedgwick Camp, Sons of Veterans, in St. John’s M. E. church, Pleasant Hill. : —Masked burglars whom Peter Schultz: back surprised while they were looting his store at Shamokin, fired on him, killed his watchdog and escaped —Haviug booked orders for 18,000 squares of roofing slate, mostly for export, the Mea- dowbrook slate company, near Slatington, has enlarged its factory. —Altoona’s driving park association has until to-morrow to decide whether it will spend $10,000 on extra lands and thereby capture the next State fair. —The coroner's jury investigating the death of Howard Morgan, who was killed in Kingston mine, censured a number of miners for violating the mine laws. —Howard Morgan, aged 19, a driver, em- ployed in the mines, of the Kingston coal company, at Wilkesbarre, was crushed to death by a car jumping the track. —The United Evangelical congregation at Myerstown has purchased a site fora new church. They lost the old edifice to the Evangelical association in the courts. —DuBois people contemplate the purchase of goats for the furnishing ofa milk supply, as they are less expensive to keep than cows, and will not be subject to a borough ordinance. —The Young Men's Christian Association, of Danville, tendered a large reception to Hon. J. H. Littleficld, of Brooklyn, N. Y., a former law student of President Lincoln, Saturday evening. —The working hours in all the depart- ments of the Beech Creek shops at Jersey Shore were reduced from ten to eight hours Thursday. Scarcity of work caused the reduction. —Charles Shaffer, a fourteen-ycar-old boy at Bloomsburg. was struck on the head by a stone thrown by a playmate, and both tables of the bone were so badly crushed as to render trepanning necessary. —Two “knights of the road,” who arrived | in Lock Haven on Monday afternoon on a | west bound freight, report that as the train was traveling at a high rate of speed near Williamsport a man walking along the track | attempted to board it, when he missed his footing and was thrown under the wheels. They reported the accident to the conductor, who, upon the arrival of the train had them detained and they were taken to Williams- port that afternoon as witnesses at the coro- ner's inquest. —A petition is being circulated among the depositors of the late banking firm of Gard- ner, Morrow & Co., Hollidaysburg, directed to John Cree, assignee, requesting him to ex- haust all remedies of the courts in an effort to procure the original article of agreement of the co-partners of the defunct institution. It is believed that the missing document forms an asset and paper valuable to the depositors, and upon the procuring of this document depends in a measure the fate of depositors representing an aggregate amount of $100,000. : —State Senator Steinman hasa mule named Jim, that has reached the two-score mark, and has been on the ‘‘pension’ list for some time, his only duty being to look after the welfare of his body during the working hours of his forty companions. One day re- cently old Jim, after having made several close surveys of the barn-yard, continued his journey to the mine blacksmith shop and knocked at the door for admission. Black- smith McCue answered his knock at the door and persuaded him with a stick to leave. Jim, however returned, this time limping and displaying to the notice of Mr. McCue that he was minus a shoe. After four new shoes had been set old Jim nodded his ap- proval and departed for home. —Amos Shoop, aged 64, residing at Belle- view, near Harrisburg, while driving Fri- day night’ was kicked to death by his horse and his dead body was found on Eighteenth street near his home. Deceased was a well- known farmer. He had been infHarrisburg yesterday and it was on his way home that the fatal accident occurred tofhim. The true circumstances of his death are not definitely known, although the coroner’s jury rendered a verdict that death was due to being kicked by his horse. The top of the old man’s head was literally kicked off and death was in- stantaneous. The report of his death was somewhat confused by a rumor to the effect that it was Harry Shoop, the undertaker, at Fourteenth and Chestnut streets, which was not the case. : McDonald, was found