Deworrai alc BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —There will be no holes in the stockings that will be hung up Sunday night. —1In the language of the streets the best shop lifter certainly is a ‘‘jimmy.” —The new financial bill went through with a rush and it left a crash in its wake. —Don’t make your good resolutions too early or you might have them broken he- fore New Years. —QUAY is still on the outside and évery day the chances for his staying there are growing stronger. — Philadelphia is about the only city that Republican politicians can see on the map these days. —Yesterday was the shortest day of the year of 1899, but it was quite long enough to be remembered as one of September's best productions dropped at the wane of December. —Hadn’t KIPLING better pass around the hat again. The list of ‘‘absent minded beggars’’ in South Africa is growing so large that their wants will keep several hats moving all the time. —That Burlington, Vermont, Bishop who died recently; leaving the public to discover that his supposed $2,000,000 for- tune really amounted to only $2.12, must have had all the fun of having a million- aire’s deference without the annoyance of taking care of such a vast fortune. —Republican apologists are now saying that the terrible slump in the values of stocks on Monday was due to a money scarcity. O ho! So they admit that money is too scarce, with the very same breath that they approve the passage of a financial bill that is calculated to make it still scarcer. —Mirs. Roy DEVEREUX, the London woman who is a correspondent for the Post of that city, is in America and says that while in the Transvaal, a year ago, she learned that ‘‘the best people down there consider KRUGER a fanatic and an ignorant person.”” What if he is. Such ‘“‘ignorance’’ only goes to emphasize JOHN BULL'S stupidity. ——Representative HALL has been placed upon the committee of Mines and Mining and expeditures in the Post Office Depart- ment. We venture the assertion that there is not another member on either of these committees who will perform the duties de- volving upon him more faithfully and intel- ligently than will the member from this dis- trict. What Ji HALL undertakes or is ex- pected to do, he does thoroughly and does well. ——The Republicans have fixed Phila- delphia as the place, and the 17th of June as the time, for holding their convention to re-nominate MCKINLEY and to endorse imperialism, trusts and expansion. It is probable that the Democrats will hold their convention a few weeks earlier. They will nominate the candidate who will be the next President of the United States, and this, without doubt, if the trustsand the new currency bill get in their work prop- erly. —The passing of the new Republican financial bill that went through the House on Monday, with every Republican vote and those of a few fool Democrats, had its echo on Wall street where one hundred million dollars were lost in stocks. Sec- retary of the Treasury GAGE had to go to the rescue of his banking and brokering friends, in order to hold up their heads under this first blow that Republican—ex- pansion in land, contraction in money— policy has given the business of the coun- try. —The killing of Gen. LAWTON, the bravest and most intrepid of our command- ers in the Philippines, within fifteen miles of Manila, seems to indicate that the war isn’t as near over as the expansionists would have us believe. They realize that things must be made look very rosy, if Mr. McKINLEY is to be re-elected and have been doing their best to shed the brighest rays on the situation possible, but the death of Gen. LAWTON, so near to Manila and when ‘‘the war is practically over,”’ will cast a shadow of awful portend on their hopes. ——The press censors in Manila are cer- tainly not being watched close enough by the administration. Just when the Mec- KINLEYists had about deceived the people into believing that the Filipino war is over here comes the shocking announcement of Gen. LAWTON’S being killed within fifteen miles of Manila, and the news of an almost successful attempt the rebels had made to capture our new navy yard and arsenal at Cavite. Surely there is something wrong. The administration censor will be de- capitated for leaving such bits of informa- tion of the true situation in the Philip- pines leak-out. ——Every man who was elected to Con- gress last fall,by the Democrats of Pennsyl- vania, voted solidly against the Republican bill to contract the currency of the country. For this action they deserve the thanks and are entitled to the respect of every man who is interested in the welfare of his coun- try. They did all in their power to stay a money panic and to prevent a scarcity of currency that will bring ruin to many and distress to all, but they were out-voted and the consequence that will follow legislation that is designed purposely to benefit a few, must fall solely upon the heads of Republi- can Representatives. Every Republican Congressman from this State, MCALEER in- cluded, voted for the bill. GC emacrati RO ® & The Statesmanship (3) of Expansionists. Two weeks ago the WATCHMAN present- ed figures showing that up to that time our efforts to subjugate the Filipinos, and take control of the Philippine Islands, had cost us over one hundred millions of dol- lars. How much more, in cold cash, they will cost before we become their possessor and controller, and how much the after- math of this effort at expansion will add to these figures no one can estimate. Actual war may be over in a few months, or it may continue for years. At the present rate of expenses, it is adding to that already made, a little over one million of dollars each week, and each week that amount is in- creasing. And after we own and control them— what then? The expenses of a large standing army to keep these new-made Americans in subjugation will have to he met. Hundreds of officers to oversee and govern them will have to be paid. Native rulers to assist those we send will have to be provided for, and an everlasting and in- creasing pension roll will have to be met, so that the expenses of this effort at expan- sion will not cease, even with the end of the war of subjugation. To many these amounts, when put to- gether, will seem a pretty large sum, for the control of a lot of islands, every foot of the territory of which is owned by indi- viduals and not an acre of which will be- long to the government. In other acquisitions we secured land. Those lands were sold to our people for homes, thus returning to the government more than their original cost. But in the Philippines we will have nothing to sell, to get our money back. A sample of the financial astuteness that governs the craze for expansion, now upon the administration, is shown in the treaty that secured us the Sulu islands and that makes us sponsors for the do-less savages, and the Malay pirates who use them as their hiding places. These islands on the ordinary maps are but mere fly specks. Their influence on trade or their value as strategical points amount to less than fly specks. They are inhabited by races of untamed and unclothed savages. They do not know what trade is, nor have they any, nor will they ever have any. They are a people who use no imple- ments, for they make or grow nothing that requires implements. They use no furni- ture, for they have no homes to put it in. They will buy no clothes, for a full dress with them consists of a breech-clout. They will take none of our shoes, for they wear none. They will require no books, for they cannot read. They will want no iron, for they build nothing. They will make no demand for wheat, for they live on roots, nuts and froit and a missionary roast when they can catch one to cook. And as it is with food and clothing, iron and machinery, so it will be with every- thing else we have to sell. Sulu islanders will not want it, because they don’t know what it is for, don’t need it, don’t use it and could not pay for it if they did, for the simple reason that they have no money, nor do they produce anything with which they could pay for if. . In fact, the trade of the tramps of this country, or that of the impecunious inmates of our pauper houses, would be a bonanza in comparison with that of the Sulu island. And yet for the glory of governing these people, without a return of any kind, except the promise that the United States flag shall be allowed to float over the Sultan’s harem and the wooden gods his heathen subjects worship, Mr. McKINLEY has har- gained to pay the sum of $13,920 yearly and to ‘‘respect and defend the rights, dig- nities and customs of the Sultan and his Dalos.”” And these ‘‘rights’’ are to have as many wives astheir beastly passions de- sire ; their ‘‘dignities’’ consist of wearing a breech-clout as a full dress and their ‘‘cus- toms’’ cover all manner of privileges, from owning and holding slaves to roasting and eating missionaries. And this treaty is called statesmanship. It is of the same kind that has spent a hundred million of dollars and sacrificed thousands upon thousands of precious lives to subjugate and control the Filipino peo- ple. ——There is nothing like an eclipse to make people look up. ——Always ahead of all the rest the Philadelphia Record Almanac has come to our desk, teeming with its weight of salient information. The Record Almanac’s value is not to be measured by the number of pages it contains, for its conciseness and rare adaptability to everyday wants make the 134 pages in it as useful as some cum- bersome books of the same sort that con- tain a thousand or more. The Almanac, like the Record, speaks of new life and new energy in its management. —— The teachers might at least have ex- plained why they voted down the school children’s offering to the Curtin monument fund. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Amendments Won’t Accomplish the par- pose. The Philadelphia Ballot Reform Associa- tion has just given to the public a lengthy manifesto telling about the needs of re- form, the great work it has done in that di- rection, and pointing out how, with a few amendments, the present election law can be made to work the wonders, it would have accomplished, in the matter of securing honest elections. In its address it covers itself all over with glory for the ideas it advanced and the success it met with in securing the change from our former simple and comparatively honest system of voting, to the present cumbersome, inefficient and corrupt one. If it were not for the fact that we know that the men belonging to this Association are thoroughly honest, not only in their desire for reform, but in their belief that they know exactly how they can secure it, we would take it that they are poking fun at themselves or ironically referring to the miserable failure that has so far met their efforts in this line. It is possible for men to be honest and to be deceived. And we take it that if there are any such in this Commonwealth they are the men who claim to be the Ballot Re- form Association,and who imagine that the present system of voting is a better and more honest one than the one it succeeded. Surely, no other sane men think so. Nor would these men, if they would acquaint themselves with its practical workings, or open their eyes to the many opportunites it offers for the perpetration of frauds at elec- tions and wrongs upon the people. In fact, if they would get down from the visionary greatness, that their imaginations clothe them in, and take a practical lesson or two from some ordinary politician, who knows the means that are used and the methods that are resorted to to accomplish results at elections, he would show them, in less time than it required to write their last circular, that the present law, which is a creation of their imaginative minds, is the weakest and worst measure of the kind that disgraces the statute books of any State. It would be a waste of time to refer, even as we have done in this short space, to the action of these reformers were it not for the fact that their address is but the hegin- ning of an effort, they intend putting forth, to continue the present rotten sys- tem of voting by making a few minor amendments to the law now in force. And such purpose ought to be called down at once. It might tosome extent secure some improvement on the present system, be- cause any change would be an improve- ment on that, but it would not insure what the people of the State want or what is needed to guarantee honest elections. To make certain of this, our whole rotten system must be ahandoned and radical changes made in election methods from the registry of voters to the certifying of returns. These changes should be such as will require the personal registration of every voter ; that will take from the courts the power to revise or change a ticket, for technical reasons, after it has been named at the primaries ; that will make bribery in the booths impossible ; that will simpli- fy voting so that every citizen can cast his ballot correctly without assistance ; that will insure the secrecy of the ballot and finally, that will guarantee a correct and prompt return of the vote. These are the changes we need, and they are changes that can never be secured by any amendment to our present system of voting. That the men who constitute the Ballot Reform Association deserve credit for their intentions no one will deny, but after the experience we have had under the law they formulated and forced upon us in 1893, the people may well pray to be spared the in- fliction of other election laws emanating from the same source. ——That annual newspaper black-mailer, known as ROWELL’S American Newspaper Directory, is sending out its demands again for information as to the business of each individual publisher throughout the coun- try. For years this firm of advertising leeches, that puts out this publication, has been holding the press of the country up threatening that if affidavits as to the cir- culation of each paper are not furnished them, they will fix and publish it at such figures as they see proper. The circulation of any publication is the private property of its publisher, and Messrs. ROWELL & Co. have no more business to publish any- thing about it—unless they are its recog- nized representatives—than we have to at- tempt to tell the public the amount of their bank account. And this demand on their part, to know the circulation of news- papers that do not want their business, is a bit of impudence that is equaled only by the audacity shown in their attempt to pass upon advertisers their publication, as a reliable directory of the circulation of the different newspapers of the United States. Of all the publications of the kind issued it is the most unreliable and unfair to both advertisers and publishers. _ BELLEFONTE, PA., DEC. 22. 1899. May Prove An Eye Opener, It is now currently reported and is get- ting to be very generally believed that ex- Senator QUAY, finding it impossible to se- cure aseat in the United States Senate through the appointment by his Governor, will withdraw his papers from Washington and request the re-convening of the Legis- lature, to try his luck again before that body. There will be no question about this being done if Mr. QUAY desires it. He can recall the certificate of appoint- ment that was sent to Washington, when- ever he wishes to, and he owns the Governor of Pennsylvania as absolutely as he does the shirt that covers his back. What he wants in this matter will be done, whether it accords with the will of the people or is in the interest of the State or not. In Governor STONE'S estimation it is no mat- ter what the people of Pennsylvania want, so that Mr. QUAY’S interests are cared for and Mr. QUAY’S desires complied with. And these will control his action in the re- convening of the Legislature, whether it costs the taxpayers fifty or five hundred thousand dollars, or even more. Such is the condition of Pennsylvania politics and such the extent of the political subservienoy of the people that whatever the boss’ demands are—no matter how outrageous or oppressive they may be—they go, and that is the end of it. Last week, in order to escape the expense of counsel to argue his claim before the Senate committee, he had Attorney General ELKIN appear as the representative of the State, in his behalf, thus saddling upon the taxpayers of the Commonwealth his in- dividual expenses, in a case in which the representatives of these same taxpayers turned him down. By the time the peo- ple get through paying the costs of courts in trying him for violations of the law, in defraying the traveling expensesand board of attorneys to represent him in Washing- ton, and the cost of an extra session of the Legislature in order that his desires may be gratified and his political interests be cared for, they will, at least, be a little wiser if not quite so well off. What seems strangest to us, in this con- nection, is that men who claim to have the intelligence and independence that the tax- payers of Pennsylvaniaare usually credited with, zo on year after year blindly and bigotedly voting for a party that robs, and imposes upon, them as Mr. QUAY’s Repub- lican party does. Hit the Right Spot First. New York brokers have been the loudest yelpers in the country for the single gold standard and the withdrawal of the green back currency from circulation. On Monday the Republicans in Congress passed their currency bill, which includes these two features, and Wall street securities and speculative stocks shrunk, in listed value, over one hundred millions of dollars in less time than it took Congress to pass the bill. Brokers offered as high as 115 per cent. for money to tide them over the panic, but could not secure it and to-day many men who were in comfortable circumstances on Monday morning, and who thought the gold standard a great thing, are financial wrecks. While the effects of ‘‘single standard’’ legislation struck the right spot first, and the country has little reason to mourn over Wall street’s losses, it is sure to settle down, sooner or later, in the same effective manner, upon every interest,every industry and every enterprise in the coun- try, except that of speculators in money. They are the ones who will benefit by the contraction of the currency. The people are the ones who will suffer. When to Begin. It is a great fight that is on in this State between the Independent Republicans and Mr. QUAY as to who will control the next Legislature—great because of the bitterness there is in it and great because of the blow- ing there is about it. What will be the result no one can foretell as no one knows what practical efforts the Independents will put forth, and without systemized, practical work, all their labor will be in vain. If they begin at the bottom, where they should, and see that honest election officers are chosen in Philadelphia and Pittsburg, at the February elections, so that an honest count of the vote will be insured in Novem- ber, they will hold the key to the situa- tion. If they fail to do this they may as well “hang their harps on the willow”’ and prepare to mourn over lost hopes, and wasted opportunities for the next five years. There is a time for all things, and the time for the Independents to lay the founda- tion for success is when the election boards, that control the voting and makea return of the vote, are chosen. Are they wise enough to realize this fact? It was a solar-plexus blow that the gold standard gave the money sharks of Wall street on its first appearance in the ring on Monday last. NO. 50. The Institute of the Public Teachers of Centre County. School The Teachers are Having a Successful Week.—All but Six of Them Enrolled.—Good Instructors and Good Entertainments Combine to Make Amusing and Instructive Sessions. The fifty-third annual session of the public school teachers of Centre county convened in the court house in Bellefonte, on Monday morning, and the week started off auspiciously with a fair December day and a good attendance. Tuesday was a little disappointing in the weather line but Wednesday the clerk of that department righted things and once again the fair pedagogues were able to go abroad, between sessions, in all the splendour of new gowns; leaving their rainy day skirts to rest peace- fully in their trunks. 7 There was no regular session in the morning, all the time being taken up with enrollment and organization but at 1:30 in the afternoon county superintendent Gramley called his corps to order and they settled down at once to work. The exercises were opened by singing led by Prof. Philip H. Meyer, of Boals- burg, the well known musical instructor who has very satisfactorily conducted that department for several years. He was as- sisted in his efforts to instruct by Miss Helen Bartholomew, of Centre Hall, who presides at the piano, accompanied by W. A. Brown, of Spring Mills, on the cornet. Dr. H. C. Holloway, pastor of the Luth- eran church of Bellefonte, was introduced. He read a Scripture lesson, after which he offered an earnest prayer. The officers and committees for this ses- sion of institute were then announced as follows : President.—C. L. Gramley, county su- perintendent. Vice presidents.—Miss Bella Rankin, W. P. Hosterman. Recording secretary.—S. W. Butler. Assistant secretary.—R. D. Foreman. Enrolling secretaries.—A. C. Thompson, T. A. Auman. Committees : Elections.—T. L. Crust, W. W. Keller, Thos. L. Moore. Resolutions.—G. W. Andrew, W. H. Limbert, Annie G. Healy, John D. Meyer, K. B. Moomaw. Auditing accounts.—M. E. Heberling, A. L. Duck, F. M. Emerick, 8. T. Will- iams, L. H. Yocum. Legislation.—D. M. Wolf, G. W. An- drews, D. O. Etters, H. C. Rothrock, F. A. Foreman, C. E. Hower. Ushers.—H. E. Yearick, Randall Musser, J. M. Garbrick, Homer Gentzel, W. C. Thompson, C. V. Woodward, George Loy, Robert Herman, J. R. Williams, Willis Eves, M. C. Stover, Charles Reese. Door-keepers.—H. A. Detwiler. J. F. Garthoff. = The first instructor announced was Prof. George P. Bible, principal of the East Stroudsburg Normal school. Mr. Bible is an old Centre county boy and was given a warm welcome on taking the platform. His subject was ‘‘School Management’’ which he handled in an able manner. At other times during the sessions Prof. Bible has talked on various topics pertaining to school room regulations and best methods ‘of imparting and impressing knowledge on the part of teachers. Dr. M. G. Benedict, formerly of State College, but now of New Britain, Conn., was then introduced. His subject was an interesting one, ‘Man Hidden in the Heart.”” Dr. Benedict is one of the ablest men who have ever talked to Centre coun- ty teachers and his talks during the week on psychology and philosophy have been well worth the attention they received. But they are naturally along such deep lines that only the more mature minds have the proper conception of their mean- ing. TUESDAY’S SESSIONS. At the Tuesday sessions Prof. Bible, Dr. Benedict and Prof. A. W. Hawks, of Balti- more, again took up the threads of their thoughts of the preceding day. A portion of Prof. Bible's talk is so pertinent to the matter of low pay for teachers in Centre county primary schools that it is worthy serious thought. He showed the advance made in all lines of science, trade, invention ete., and argued that education was not and should not be behind the rest. There are some methods used in the schools which should not be discarded. Mental arithmetic has been thrown out which he believed to be a mis- take. He spoke of the mistake made by directors in paying highest salaries to teachers in the High schools where they had the fewest pupils, and paying the low- est prices to teachers of primary grades where they have the most pupils. No teacher can teach 80 pupils at $30.00 per month and accomplish much. He advo- cated more teachers and extended the hope that there would be an Executive some day who would not cut down the school appropriation. He closed by advocating te back hand or vertical style of penman- ship. The committees on elections then report- ed the following nominations for officers for the ensuing year. Vice presidents—H. C. Rothrock, of Millheim ; G.{W. Andrews, Philipsburg ; Sarah E. Bechdel, Howard ; Alice K. Dor- worth, College Boro. Recording secretary—DM. 'E. Heberling, Pine Grove Mills; S. T. Brooks, Spring township. Assistant secretary—Harry Crain, Rush fownship ; D. K. Keller, of Potter town- ship. Tuesday evening Prof. Hawks entertain- ed a large audience with his lecture on ‘People I Have met.’” It fairly sparkled with wit, down under which a good lesson in character was to be learned by those who followed him deeper into it than the laughable veneer he gave to his theme. WEDNESDAY. The Wednesday sessions were a continua- tion of the work of the preceding ones. Two new instructors were introduced in Miss Lelia Patridge, of Philadelphia, and Dr. C. W. Heisler, president of the Susquehanna University, whose en- tertaining talks on pedagogy, child study, and spelling methods were highly benefi- cial. Miss Patridge was a favorite here Concluded on page 4. Spawls from the Keystone. —While Reuben Belias, of Orangeville, Co- lumbia county, was engaged in changing the shafts on a buggy he suddenly droppe dead. —Anna, a young daughter of William Hartzel, was suddenly stricken with blind- ness while at work im the silk mill at Blooms- burg, — Ex-Governor Beaver delivered an ad” dress on ‘‘Washington as a private citizen” before the students at Girard College last Thursday evening. —Governor Stone has reappointed C. K. Sober game commissioner. Mr, Sober was appointed for the three year term by Govern- or Hasting, and he is the proper person for the position. —Judge Mayer has handed down an opin- ion in the excessive fee case of Lycoming county vs ex-prothonotary Hopkins. The decision awards Hopkins $1,060. The award is received with satisfaction by Mr. Hopkins. —John C. Miller, 83 years old, of Cherry Springs, near Coudersport, is dying of blood poisoning. While using a jack to remove his boots, one of them slipped and a nail in its heel scratched a toe on the other foot. —Nellie Wolf, a dining room girl at the Gamble house, Jersey Shore, who had been in a cataleptic slumber from Sunday night December 3rd, until Saturday evening, Dec. 9th, awoke then and is now as wide awake as anybody. —Fire of supposed incendiary. origin totally destroyed the large saw and bone mills locat- ed on the Conewago Creek, near New Oxford York county, and owned by Captain A. W. Eichelberger, of Hanover. The loss is esti- mated at $3,000. —Mayor Nichols, of Wilksbarre, has notifi- ed his policemen that he would discharge the whole force if they did not euforce the law against violators of the liquor law, who, he said, comprised three-fourths of those engag- ed in the traffic in that city. —Atthe December term of the Pike county courts, County Surveyor Westbrook, who was elected prothonotary, resigned the former office and Judge Purdy appointed Frank Schorr, secretary of the Democratic county committee, to fill the vacancy. —The Harter brothers, lumberman, have purchased of Joel Baily, of Philadelphia, a tract of 4016 acres of timber land in Little Sugar Valley, Centre county, for $10,000. The purchasers will at once begin lumbering operations on the tract. —At Jersey Shore Monday while Jennie Bower, a domestic, was working in the wood- shed near the house,a bullet struck her inthe right arm. The wound is not a serious one. The bullet came from a Flobert rifle in the hands of Fred Lentz, who was practicing in a lot near by. —William Kearon, of Harwood, an ex-gun- ner in the United States navy, is organizing a company of volunteers te go to South Afri- ca and fight with the Boers. He says he has been commissioned to form a force 300 strong and has already secured seventeen men in Harwood alone. damaged by fire Sunday afternoon, and the occupants of the building, M. L. Staver, in- surance agent, and P. O. Buck, merchant tailor, both suffered considerable loss from flames and water. —The new Catholic church at Spangler was dedicated with imposing ceremonies Sunday. The services were in charge of Right Rev. Leander Schneer, O. S. B., archabbott of St. Vincent, assisted by numerous visiting priests. The sermon was preached by Rev. P. Edward 0. 8S. B., St. Vincent college. —Michael Bonnell, of Waterville, Lycom - ing county, was found dead in bed Monday morning, death being due to apoplexy. He was a veteran of the Civil war, having serv- ed three years and participated in twenty- three engagements. He served as postmaster for twenty years, his first appointment being made by President Grant. —Isaac Birrillo, who was convicted at the November term of court for the murder of his wife at Blossburg on July 5th. by setting fire to her clothes and holding her hands while she burned, was brought into court at Wellsboro Friday for sentence. Before Judge Mitchell pronounced his doom Birrillo pro- tested his innocence. He received his sen- tence of death with composure. —At Renovo Monday morning Harry, the 8-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Brown, with several companions climbed up the steepest part of the mountain opposite Fifteenth street. Suddenly Harry stumbled and he tumbled head over heels to the bot- tom, a distance of over 200 feet. His skull was fractured. When picked up he was un- conscious. His recovery is doubtful. —Sheriff Farnsworth and deputy Sheriff Stevens returned Friday night with Roy Deziel and James McCormick, who escaped from the county jail at Coudersport Thurs- day night. The men were recaptured, after a desperate fight, in a *‘pig’s ear’’ near Cos- tello, and in the struggle McCormick’s face and head were badly braised. The officers were guided in the pursuit by tracks in the Snow. —Herbert Wilson, a justice of the peace and school teacher, of Barree township, Hunt - ingdon county, has left for parts unknown. He was a collector of the delinquent county tax in his township certified out by the coun - ty treasurer, in which he is a defaulter to the amount of $600 to $800. The county commis- sioners promptly notified his bondsmen of the fact that they would be expected to make good the deficit, and they took charge of his unfinished collections. —The Philadelphia and Reading railway is experimenting with a device for ridding smoking cars of smoke. The idea isin the shape of a fan. There are three of them and they are similiar to electric fans. They have two blades and are worked by an air wheel which is stationed on the roof of the car. The faster the car moves the greater the speed of the fan, and a continuous circulation is kept up which forces the smoke out through the ventilators or rear windows of the car. These fans are now being experi- mented with on some of the through cars be- tween Philadelphia and Pottsville, and re- sults have been very satisfactory. —The brick block of Mrs. Carrie Sypher, : {on Main street, Jersey Shore, was badly