Bemorray atc, Bellefonte, Pa., July 28, 1899. P. GRAY MEEK, . Ep1iror. Ee, Terms or Susscererion.—Until further notice this paper will be furnished to subscribers at the following rates : Paid strictly in advance.......cccccoeeinee 81.00 Paid before expiration of year. o Paid after expiration of year........... 2.00 aos—— rasa The Democratic State Ticket. FOR THE SUPREME COURT: S. L. MESTREZAT, of Fayette county. FOR THE SUPERIOR COURT: C. J. REILLY, of Lycoming county. FOR STATE TREASURER! W. T. CREASY, of Columbia county. The County Ticket. Foi Sherif—CYRUS BRUNGARD. For Treasurer—W. T. SPEER. For Recorder—J. C. HARPER. For Register—ALEX ARCHEY. For Commissioners— { P 5 JENEL AN, For Coroner—W. U. IRVIN. A “Boodle” Victory. Ex-Governor HASTINGS no doubt teels good. His actions indicate it; his ap- pearance avers it. He believes he has won a victory. He thinks the Republican peo- ple of the county rallied around him for the purpose of making him their Moses, and he may be honest in the thought that they have done so because they prefer him to boss QUAY. Newspapers at a distance, that know nothing of the actual situation, are loud and positive in their claim that the result, which put the ex-Governorat the head of the Republican organization in the county, is a victory for reform; that it is evidence of the disgust of the Republican voters with QUAY’s corruption and dictation; a protest against his methodsand purposes. That it is a rebuke to Governor STONE for his ap- pointment of QUAY as Senator; for his veto of the constitutional amendments; for his cutting down of the school appropriation, and other disgraceful and demoralizing acts that have characterized his administration. We wish, most seriously, that the facts would warrant these conclusions. But they do not or will not. The plain truth is there was no principle in the fight. It started out promising to be a fair, straight contest between the QUAY and anti-QUAY ele- ments; a contest that would rally to the one side that class of voters who are willing to wear a collar and serve a master, and to the other the decent, reputable men whose souls should be their own and whose actions are dictated by no one. But it soon devel- oped intoa struggle for bossism here at home, and from that went down to a dirty, drunken, demoralizing squabble, that end- ed, showing only the depraved and debauch- ed condition of Republican politics within the county. There was not a single district in which the contest was waged on the broad ground of reform. It was not a question of better government, or of honest and decent ad- ministration of public affairs, hut a matter of who could put up the most money and debauch the most voters. QuAY’s debauching and dictatorial methods; STONE'S unwarranted and fla. grant abuses of power; LOVE’s bedraggling of the judicial ermine in the filth of dirty _ politics, or HASTINGS’ pretensions and promises of reform were lost sight of in the shameless scramble of the rabble for the bottles that were furnished by the thous- ands and the money that was handed out at every corner. AND IT WAS THESE THAT WON.—Not re- form. Not anti-QUuAvYIsM. Not HASTINGS. Not opposition to the judiciary in politics, or not the intent of redeeming the Re- publican party from the disgrace of ring rule and the State from a continuation of its corrupt control. If it was a victory of any kind it was a victory only for the power of money, aided by the demoralization that whisky brings. When we state that of the supposed 4,000 Republican voters of the county less than 2,700 of them were at the polls, and that to secure a majority of 300, of those who did vote, it cost Governor HASTINGS over $8,000, the glory(?) there is in such a vie- tory can he understood and appreciated. Whatever glory there is in it he is enti- tled to and should enjoy. The effects will be known and felt better next November, when the mercenary and debauched host, that is after his money and of which he has given them a taste, de- mands their pay for what he may wish them todo at that time. —1It will take years for Centre county to recover from the corruption and de- bauchery of the recent Republican contest. Men were paid from $3 to $500, according as their influence was rated, and liquor was dispensed in barrels. Some were actually encouraged to perjure themselves, while innocent ones were taught the de- moralizing, good government wrecking principle of voting only ‘‘for the price.” The men who encouraged such outrages against God and his purity loving people will be made to account for these terrible wrongs. eet ——When QUAY wins a victory he usually goes to Florida to celebrate it. Former Governor HASTINGS departed for Cape May on Wednesday morning. At Least Two Truths. There was a good deal of truth and considerable that was not true told by both sides, in the struggle among the Republicans of the county, for each knew the other and were conversant with their acts and shortcomings. There was noth- ing more truthful said, however, than was expressed on one of the transperencies that was carried by those who went out to the ‘“Mansion’’ to rejoice with the ex-Governor over his victory on Saturday night. On one side were the words: ‘OUR DAN LEADS, HE NEVER FOLLOWS.”’ and on the other side: ‘THEY BUCKED UP, AGAINST THE REAL THING.” The number of times the Governor has “refused to follow’’ his own party’s lead is well known and has been gratefully re- membered by those he assisted. It was this remembrance, coupled, possibly with a fair share of the ‘‘real thing,’’ that the other fellow ‘‘bucked up against’’ that se- cared him the votes of so many persons who have not heretofore been in the habit of voting at Republican primaries. It is not often that people are willing, to tell these kind of truths even on trans perencies. ——No very great length of time has elapsed since this country was flooded with letters hearing foreign postmarks and teeming with cowardly and contemptible insinuations about respected women of this place. The very nature of the calumnies and the absence of all decency in dragging the fair names of honored women into a public scandal disgusted every right think- ing person in this community and convine- ed all that the author of such letters could be actuated only by insanity or a most hellishly vicious nature. No decent per- son repeated their contents and we venture the assertion that not a Centre county pa- per entertained a thought of publishing one of them Yet in the last issue of one of the HASTINGS papers in this county we were amazed at seeing that that faction had re- sorted to just such vile methods of defama- tion as the public had condemned from an- other source only a short time ago. Words are inadequate to picture the miserable, wretched, damnable person who could sell all of his honor for the sum that was prob- ably paid for such a cowardly article. ——Of course the aftermath of such a questionable contest as has just closed in this county could not be expected to bring other than numerous unsavory and discred- itable stories about those who were princi- pally interested in it, but the one among all others that needs investigation most is the one to the effect that Mr. WANAMAK- ER, of Philadelphia, contributed funds to the HASTINGS campaign. If this be true —and Mr. WANAMAKER is under a moral obligation to this community to affirm or deny it—he has lent financial aid to a hypocritical, reform movement that has made drunkards, and perjurers out of Centre county young men, demoralized Sunday school entertainments by sending liquor into the communities in which they were being held and abetted slanderous attacks against fair women. Mr. WANAMAKER, we cannot believe you guilty of having been a party to such a terrible business. Were you? ——A fitting conclusion to the disgrace- ful and debauching Republican fight that has just been witnessed in this county, would be the impeachment of Judge JOAN GrAY Love for acts unbecoming one in his position and the arraignment of his ex- excellency, DANIEL HARTMAN HASTINGS, for the shameful and open bribery of voters at the primaries. If a judge of the courts and an ex-Gov- ernor of the Commonwealth have no re- spect for the dignity of the bench or no re- gard for the statutes of the State, what can be expected of other people? Hold to Monroe Doctrine. Our Peace Delegates Give Notice to the European Nations. THE HAGUE, July 25.—The objection of the American delegates to Article XX VII. of the Arbitration Convention, binding the powers ‘‘as a duty’’ to appeal to the tribu- nal when guarrellers threaten to use force, has been arranged. The article has not ; been molified, but the Americans made a declaration assuring the desired object of not being forced to interfere in European affairs or vice versa. The declaration of the American dele- gates was as follows: “The delegation of the United States, in signing the convention regulating the peaceable settlement of international con- flicts, as proposed by the International Peace Conference, makes the following declaration: Nothing contained in this con- vention shall be so construed as to require the United States to depart from its tradi- tional policy of not entering upon, interfer- ing with or entangling itself in the politic- al questions or internal administration of any foreign State. Nor shall anything in said convention be construed to require the relinquishment by the United States of its traditional attitnde toward purely Ameri- can questions.’’ The proposal was announced to the plen- ary conference this afternoon and met with no opposition. The plenary conference adopted the arbitration scheme without modification and without debate. Afterward it lengthily discussed the question whether a country not taking part in the conference would be allowed to ac- cede to the conventions. Although the Transvaal and the Pope were not mention- ed, it was generally understood that the point mainly affected them. The question is whether the uninvited powers shall be allowed to adhere to the conventions by merely formally notifying the Government of the Netherlands to that effect, or shall the assent of all the signa- tories be necessary? Great Britain, Russia and Italy favored the latter method. Its adoption would enable Great Britain to veto the adhesion of the Transvaal. No decision was reached on the subject. Sensible Suggestions From Carnegie. Fulfillment of Predictions About the Philippines Buying a Rebellion, and No End of the War in Sight. A Parallel Case That Sense and Courage Needed. Failing to End it Will Defeat McKinley. LoNDOY, July 22.—Andrew Carnegie has the following to say on the situation in the Philippines: “The situation is just what was predict- ed by those who warned the President that there -—as no substitute for nationality. When he changed his instructions to the peace commission and bought a rebellion from Spain we saw that the Philippines could not easily be conquered; that a long :| costly war was inevitable if he rashly un- dertook subjugation. We have not been deceived, as the President was, by Otis’ announced intentions week after week to end the war by capturing the insurgents. The proposed increase of raw, untrained volunteers is only leading him into a sec- ond season of failure. LAWTON TELLS WHAT IS REQUIRED. ‘General Lawton has told us that 100,000 soldiers are required—not fresh volunteers. We have not got these, and cannot get them, since the trained volunteers refuse to re-enlist. “The war will probably end next June for another rainy season without rvesult. Even if the insurgents are badly punished we shall not be much nearer the peaceful, successful occupation of the country which is necessary to begin the work of the civili- zation and development of these 8,000,000 of people. There will still be the question of our keeping there an. overpowering mili- tary force. BRITAIN’S PARALLEL CASE. “There is no solution except that which makes the people friendly to us, and this can only be obtained by a promise of inde- pendence such as was given to Cuba. There is a recent episode in Great Britain’s his- tory which I commend to the President. Two years ago 70,000 British troops were concentrated, the largest force ever assem- bled in India, and war was declared against the Afridis. The campaign resulted much as has ours against the Filipinos. Lock- hart published a proclamation stating that he was about to descend from the mount- ains into the valley for climate reasons,but in the spring he would return to complete the campaign. The spring never came. He did not return. The Afridis, like the Fili- pinos had been found such heroic defenders of their land that the Government recog- nized that a bad mistake had been made. The Afridis remain independent. Their land is their own. RECOMMENDS SALISBURY’S COURAGE. ‘Such statesmanship a strong man like Salisbury can adopt. The opposition party bad denounced as unjust the attack on the Afridis, rejoiced that it was defeated and the Salisbury government is stronger than ever. “So it would be with our Philippine mistake if the President only had Salis- bury’s courage. Instead of sending 12,000 more of our thoughtless. young men to be sacrificed, he should send a capable states- man, with a mind of his, oyn, and author- ize him to negotiate peace and promise in-. dependence under our protectorate until a proper government can be established. FATE OF REPUBLICAN PARTY. “The Democratic party would stultify itself if it did not indorse this policy. If the next rainy season finds us still at war with the Filipinos it will go hard with the, Republican party's nominee. No forty or fifty thousand men, mostly untrained and’ unacclimated, are likely to effectually es-: not only the dispersipg of the opposing party, but the TE ae of our ule by the people, must be obtained.. Without this, victory is only defeat. WANTS MILES TO SETTLE IT. “General Miles, no doubt, is our best general. He has never yet failed. His greatest victories have been those wou by conciliation and management. Let him be sent to Manila, authorized to take all the conciliatory as well as military measures necessary in his judgment to obtain lasting peace, including authority to promise a trial of independence under our protecto- rate whenever a satisfactory government is securely established. I believe his record of unvarying success will not be broken. THE FATE BEFORE US. ‘It is either this policy now or another year of failure. We have nothing to hope from military forces alone in the Philip- pines. We are not a military power 15,000 miles from our military base, and I hope we never will be. A great standing army is necessary for foreign conquest. This, the masses of the American people, fortu- nately, will not approve.’’ War Correspondents Muzzled by Otis. They Find It Almost Impossible to Write the Truth About the Situation. LONDON, July 25.—A private letter re- ceived here to-day from a war correspond- ent at Manila, and dated June 17th, says: “There seems to be no end of war in sight. The censorship is constantly be- coming more troublesome. General Otis recently established a rule that any matter relating to the navy must be taken to the commander of the fleet for his approval, and afterwards submitted to the military censor, thus adding to our difficulties. For some reason, which the censor would not explain. 1. General Otis refused to allow us to send the death of Monadnock’s captain | (Nicholas) for two days after its occur- rence. 2. The general also refused to let us send news of the disappearance of Captain Rocke- feller (April 28th) on the ground that it would worry his family, or the Killing of Captain Tilly, of the signal corps, until the next day. The correspondents are all very tired of this arrangement, which simply means that they must go out and run large chances of getting shot, several times a week, with no chance of making reputations, because their stories must always reflect Otis’ views. ‘“The resources and fighting qualities of the natives are quite misunderstood by the American papers, and we cannot write the facts without being accused of treason; nor can we tell of the practically unanimous opposition to the dislike of the war among the American troops. The volunteers, or at least a portion of them, were at one time on the verge of mutiny, and unless General Otis bad begun sending them homewards there would have been sensa- tional developments. ‘‘We have been absolutely refused all hospital figures.” : A Wabbler. From the Clarion Democrat. It is noticed that the Republican press is not saying so much just now about *‘‘stand- ing by the President,’ because they don’t know where the President stands. He gets tablish our control there by next June, for-: Stone in Jones’ Shoes. . Democratic National Chairman Has Given the Ex- Governor Power to Offer Resignation. CHICAGO, July 23.—Apparently the Alt- geld-Williams-Tarvin-Abbott commission was not made acquainted with all the in- side history of last Thursday’s meeting. It did not known that W. J. Stone was au- thorized to present Chairman Jones’ resig- pation in the event he deemed it necessary to do so. It leaked out after Mr. Stone left the city. According to a member of the National committee he had a letter from Senator Jones in his possession which virtually transferred to him full command the party organization. : “That letter,’’ continued the committee- man, “named Mr. Stone acting chairman of the committee, and authorized him to take control and perform all the duties of the chairman. Chairman Jones also said to Mr. Stone that if he deemed it advisable and would take the chairmanship himself he could present his resignation. But af- ter the committee had created the office of vice chairman, elected Mr. Stone to fill it and conferred upon him all the powers of the chairman, it was not thought necessary to retire Senator Jones. While Senator Jones was left as the nominal head of the committee, it is not likely he will ever again take an active part. ““The understanding is that all the busi- ness has been placed in Mr. Stone’s hands, and that he will be in full charge until the National convention is called to order. Then the life of this committee ends. Its successor will be chosen by the convention. What We Are Fighting For. General Funston, of Kansas, who comes out of the Philippine campaign the popular hero of the fighting, is guilty of ‘‘treason- able’’ sentiments in a 1ecent letter. He says: Strange as it may seem, I am almost a ‘‘peace-at-any-price’” man. When life and property can be saved, it is almost a crime not to follow that rule, whatever the circum- stances be arguing against it. I am a Re- publican, but I am an _anti-expansionist, though not a bitter one. Big syndicates and capitalists will be greatly benefited by the retention of these islands, but outside of a few exceptional individual cases I can see no advantage in their possession by the United States. The islands are so thickly populated and labor so cheap there certainly is no in- ducement for the American laborer. It is a fact, so far any possible benefit to this country is concerned, that we are lavishing blood and treasure, as Colonel Funston says, for ‘‘big syndicates and capitalists.” American labor has no share, save to enlist and pay taxes. Growth of Epworth League. Bishop Ninde Reports Nearly Two Million Members to the Board of Control. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., July 24.—The Board of Control of the Epworth League met at ten o’clock to-day to hear reports and consider matters pertaining to the League. Bishop W." X. Ninde, Detroit, President of the Board, presided. The re- port ‘of Rev. Edwin A. Schell, General Sec- retary of the Epworth League, was sub- mitted, in which he said: “Many of the great expectations enter- tained at the meeting of the Board of Con- ‘trol two years ago have been fully realized. We have steadily grown, until to-day we number 26,450 chapters, with a member- ship of more than 1,750,000 in our own Methodist church alone. New chapters have been established in Liberia, Hawaii, Alaska, Russia, and Bishop McCabe is ‘eagerly 'vat~hing an opportunity to plant us in Manila. A German chapterin Zurich, Switzerland, numbers 300 members.’ Rev. F. L. Nagler, Cincinnati, German | assistant secretary of the League, present- ed a report of the German branch, and a report of the League’s work among the col- ored people was presented by colored secretary Rev. Irvine G. Penn, of Atlanta. The Board will probably be in session three days. Threats of Revolt in Cuba. Native Veterans Deniand That Uncle Sam Show His Hand. : HAVANA, July 25.—At a meeting of Cuban veterans in this city, who oppose United States occupation and reforms in the island, a resolution was adopted de- manding that the United States make for- mal declaration of its intentions and sup- posed rights. The Cuban Census Commissioners re- cently appointed were criticised, speakers saying that they were mere nonentities and unknown men, in whose work the pub- lic would have no confidence, and that a census so taken would be unacceptable to the Cubans. General Andrade said the United States was fast sucking Cuba dry. Gualberto Gomez said if President Mc- Kinley would not consider an appeal fav- orably, the Cubans knew what steps to take to rid the island of the heel of foreign im- position. Fighting Disease Among Horses. HARRISBURG, July 25.—Dr. Leonard Pearson, State Veterinarian, proposes to take drastic measures for the suppression of anthrax in the State. In Bedford county six horses have recently died of the disease and two men were attacked by it, one of them fatally. A year ago two tanneries in the vicinity, in which these deaths occur- red, were impregnated with the germs of anthrax, bronght into this country in hides from China, and a number of cattle died as the result of drinking from a stream near the tanneries, which had to be abandoned by their owners in the interest of the pub- lic health. Last spring a gypsy camped at the deserted tanneries, and soon after a horse he had with him died of anthrax. An epidemic of the disease followed the occurrence, because the animal had not been properly buried. The early destruc- tion of the infected tanneries is possible. Buried a Wax Figure. An Alleged Life Insurance Fraud Involving the Pay- ment of $22,000. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., July 25.—The banks at Knoxville and Johnson City, Tenn., which were intrusted with the life insurance of Thomas Chase, amounting to about $30,000, have been enjoined from paying such funds over to Mrs. Chase, the beneficiary, as have not already been paid. The amount yet in bank is said to be $22,- 000. . The attorneys securing the injuction alleged in the petition that. Chase did not die as he was reported to have, and that a wax figure was buried as his remains; that he was probably the victim of a hypnotist, who worked in collusion with the bene- ficiary to secure the insurance money, and who ‘probably spirited Chase away while he was under hypnotic inflyences. ————— ——1If you want fine work done of every description the WATCHMAN is the place on several sides of every question that he has anything to do with. SN to have it d one. ADDITIONAL LOCALS. ——~Centre county farmers are well through harvesting their oats crops. ee = et “ ——Dr. Charles Wood, of Philadelphia, will preach in the Presbyterian church on Sunday. ; Hae i ——The Christian Sunday school at Ro- mola realized $14.50 at its festival on Sat- urday evening. i LA ini ——Rev. Edgar Eugene Brooks. of Ty- rone, will conduct the services in the Epis- copal church here on Sunday, while Rev. George I. Brown will preach in Mr. Brooks’ church. — Sees — — Communion services will be held in the Bellefonte Evangelical church, Sunday, July 30th, at 10.30 a. m. and 7.30 p. m. Rev. S. P. Remer will preach in the even- ing. He will also preach Friday evening and hold quarterly conference after th : services. FR EE ——Dr. D. 8S. Monroe will hold guarter- ly conferences at Valentines Sat. July 20th at 10 a. m.; Howard at 2 p. m.; Unionville at 6 p. m.; Spring Mills, Monday, July 31st at 10 a. m.; Bellefonte at 7:30 p. m. And will preach at Bellefonte, Sunday, July 31st, at 10:30 a. m.; Valentines at 2 p. m.; Coleville at 4:30 p. m., and Milesburg at 7:30 p. m. DR. GOBBLE at THE Y. M.C. A.—On Sunday afternoon A. E. Gobble, president of the New Berlin college, and a well known orator, will lead a union gospel meeting in the parlors of the Y. M. C. A. at 4 o'clock. Everybody in town is in- vited to this meeting. i A i ——F. H. Clement & Co. of which Mr. T. A. Shoemaker of this place, is a large new $15,000 reservoir for the town of Barneshoro. rr ——Arrangements have been made for a through coach from Bellefonte to Philadel- phia, for the seashore excursion of July 27th, August 10th and 24th, on train leav- ing Bellefonte at 6:40 a. m., train No. 130. i et rit ——Col. George Nox McCain, who was here doing the Hastings end of the recent fight for the Philadelphia Press, left for San Francisco, on Wedneslay, to be there when the 10th Reg. arrives from Manila. There will be some in this county who won't helieve much he reports about that great event. nisl ape ai ——On Tuesday evening Herbert Shef- fer, DeMont Frazier and Orien Atwood were driving up Main street, in Howard, on their way home from a fishing trip. The night was dark and they did not see an obstruction on the street, so they ran in- to it and narrowly escaped serious injury. As it was the buggy was smashed and the horse considerably cut. — The date decided for. opening the Juniata valley camp meeting at Newton Hamilton, is August 15th, continuing ten days. Excursion tickets, one fare for the round trip, will be sold by the P. R. R. All the religious services this year will be in charge of Rev. Dr. M. K. Foster, of Lock Haven, who will be assisted by Dr. W. A. Stephens, Dr. W. P. Eveland, Rev. J. M. Johnson, Rev. F. W. Biddle, Rev. T. A. Elliott, Rev. J. H. Daugherty and other ministers of the conference. > ——S. Harris Rhodes, a member of Co. B. of this place, an extra freight bhrake- man on the Pittsburg division, whose home is at Unionville, below Bush hollow, was seriously if not fatal- ly injured by falling under a freight train near Lilly, Monday morning, about 8 o'clock. Rhodes was running on the last car, setting a break, while the engine was backing up to get water. As he drew the brake up tight the chain broke and he was precipitated to the track, where sever- al cars passed over his legs. He was taken to the Altoona hospital, where the right leg was amputated at the knee. The other leg is badly crushed but may be saved. ih Sede ssmin ——Even if the Quay people in Centre county are now to be classed among the “‘has beens’? it still pays to be a Quay man because the plumsare dropping right along their way. The latest fortunate is Dr. John F. Harter, of State College, who has been made deputy internal revenue col- lector for the 6th Div. of the 19th Penn. district. It includes Centre, Clinton and Union counties and carries a salary of $1,- 200 with perquisites. Mr. Harter’s ap- pointment secures to the internal revenue service a very worthy, competent gentle- man. He served a term as Recorder of Centre county in a very creditable manner and is a man who will in no wise sacrifice the trust reposed in him. —eeee lp D Two PIcNIcs.—At the meeting of the picnic committee of the Royal Arcanum at Milton, this week all the chapters from Sunbury, Lewisburg, Muncy, Milton, ‘Watsontown, Williamsport, Jersey Shore, Lock Haven and Bellefonte were repre- sented. Milton, Bucknell Grove and Hecla park, were suggested as places for holding the picnic, but the territory represented being too large, and the distance from the ex- tremes being so great, it was decided to divide the territory. The Williamsport, Jersey Shore, Lock Haven and Bellefonte council decided to picnic at Hecla park, on Friday, August 26th, and the other coun- cils at Milton, on ‘Thursday, August 24th. Committees from the eouncils in this sec- tion will meet at Hecla park, on the 20th inst., to complete arrangements. owner, has been given the contract for the ——Certainly all: those people who signed that petition for a Sunday train did not know it, was ‘to run last Sunday or surely they would have been more gener- ous in their patronage of the railroad. The reception committee ‘at the station was quite large and for the-afternoon train they ‘began to gather on the platform at 3 o’clock but in dollars and cents the encouragement was not so great as the tickets sold for both morning and afternoon trains only amounted to $25. - As the train will carry mail, hereafter, the post. office will be open for a short time ‘after each train for the accommodation of the public. The train arrives here in the meérning at 9:28 from Tyrone. In the afternoon at 4:44 from Lock Haven. Tro -oe Rev. Maurice Swartz, whose pres- ence among his old friends was spoken of in last week’s issue, preached on Sunday to large audiences, both in the morning and evening, for as we Methodists wonld’t spare our newly arisen light for even one service to another church; his outside friends came in to enjoy with us the many good and bright thoughts he gave us. We are al- ways appreciative, but especially so when it is to one of our owh boys, born and ed- nucated among us, that we are listening. Just a suggestion of his energy and success may be gathered from the fact that since April he has paid off on his church at Shippensburg an indebtedness of $2,200, one old member giving $1,000. We wish this may be but a beginning of greater things to come to him. el MARRIAGE LICENSES.—Following is the list of marriage. licenses granted by or- phan’s court clerk, G. W. Rumberger, dur- ing the past week: Henry A. Yandes and Edith May Gard- ner, of Howard. g John Calvin Leitzell, of Patton town- ship, and Margaret M. Rébinson, of War- riorsmark. Cri Edward L. Heaton, of Yarnell, and Eva May Poorman, of Runville. ot Thomas F. G. Seixas, of Philadelphia, and Beulah Myrtle Smith, of Bellefonte. > or ——— ——The Mull property on Presqueisle street in Philipsburg, between Front and Second streets, was partly destroyed by fire on Sunday morning. The building was insured but the tenants suffered considera- ble loss. The principal ones were Custer & Norris, paint and wall paper dealers, be- tween twelve and fifteen hundred dollars worth of stock and tools; John Unkerd, the barber, and W. T. Forcey, dealer in meat. The fire is supposed to have been of incen- diary origin. ; er bits ——Somehow Klondike seems such a mythical and fabulous country; it is always rather surprising to hear that people there are yet alive and able to eat bacon and bear. A letter from Harry Bush dated Dawson City tered that metropolis of Alaska after a 2300 ‘mile tramp out and back, which he graphic- ally describes and during which he suffer- ed the usual experiences of sleeping out with the temperature 65° below zero, how he ate his solitary Christmas dinner much like C. D. Gibson’s pictured Klondiker but says he has lost faith in a Santa Claus who can- not brave such discomforts for his hung-up stockings invited no visit of that child- hood’s pleasure-giver—in fact that they were not even dried. He is still purser on one of the steamers of the Empire line. ————ee —— Of the four hundred and twenty- five applicants for license to practice medi- cine in the State as allopathic physicians at the recent examination in Philadelphia, H. S. Alexander, of Potter’s Mills; John T. Robinson, of State College; George D. Green, of Briarly, and Lee B. Woodcock and Eloise Meek, of this place, were among three hundred and seventy-five who passed the examination. As each one of the ap- plicants were obliged to pay a fee of twenty five dollars the seven examiners represent- ing the State Medical society netted the neat little sum of .more than $1,500 apiece for their four day’s work. Two examina- tions are held each year and as the list of would-be-doctors is gradually increasing they are likely to clear for the members of the board hereafter more than $3,000 an- nually. BusiNEss MEN’s PieN1c.—The follow- ing additional committees for the Business Men's picnic, which is to be held at Hecla park on August 31st, were appointed at the adjourned meeting of the ‘executive com- mittee in Lock Haven on Tuesday even- ing. : akers—taniod JSechler, of Belle- fonte, and S. R. Peale, of Lock Haven. Bicycle Racing—Robert F. Hunter, Belle- Tonte; Louis Anthony, "Lock Haven, H. J. Goss, Philipsbarg. Base Ball—Harry Keller and H. C. Quig- ley, of Bellefonte, and George A. Brown, of Lock Haven. nfs Fireworks — John: D. Sourbeck, Belle- fonte; Samuel Z.-Martin and Geo. Loder, Lock Haven. Music—J. C. Meyer, Bellefonte; W. O. Bently and Harry Peck; Lock Haven. Finance—T. A: Shoemaker and A. C. Mingle, Bellefonte, and: G. L. Morelock, Lock Haven. pedo Printing—J. Watson Fredericks, Flem- ington; John Olewine, Bellefonte, and Oscar ‘W. Miles, Milesburg. ::: Closing Business Places—B. C. Achen- bach, Harry Linebaugh and H. 8. Satterlee, Lock Haven; Joha Di ‘Sourbeck, G. W. Reese and Sidney Kruirine, Bellefonte; Frank Hess, John G.’Platt and Jack Gra- ham, Philipsburg; '..' |. Bellefonte was represented at the meet- ing by Messrs. J.: Will Conley and Frank Warfield. June 5th, has reached ns, He had just en-.