—_— BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —CARTER'S or DEWITT’ aren’t in it, as a universal mover, with April 1st. —The Boers seem to be still able to set a trap and the English just as able to walk into it. — Well the robins had their snow Wednesday morning, now isn’t it about time to do something for the chippies? —It didn’t take the Boers long to dem- onstrate that, even if General JOUBERT is dead and General CRONJE in captivity, “there are others.” —If England continues deporting Boers to St. Helena, the first thing she knows there will be so many of them there that they will take the island. —Now that the south pole has been found, the Centre County Centennial Com- mission might get it and grease it and have some one try to climb it during the cele- bration. —The Hon. BILL ANDREWS moved into Allegheny county to get sent to the Legis- lature. but the Allegheny countians voted on the matter Saturday, and the verdict of their ballots was that BILL might just as well have staid where he was. —The Prince of Wales has announced his intention not to go to the Paris Exposi- tion. There seems to be nothing left for usto do but stay at home now, for if AL isn’t going there will be no one there we really care to associate with. —Those who are knocking hardest on President McKINLEY these days are the fellows who were hottest for him four years ago. They will probably forget all their grievances by the time he is renominated and march up and vote the same as they have done all their lives. With a great many people politics is a game of “‘knock’’ all the time, but they always vote the same way. —The Ladies’ Home Journal is of the opinion that no person can do good brain work after eating a hearty meal, therefore, it advises only one hearty meal during the day, and that one at 6 o'clock p. m. I sounds logical, doesn’t it? But we’ll bet dollars to bent pins that .999 per cent. of all the men in the land prefer three hearty meals a day to having a reputation for be- ing able to do brilliant brain work. —Other States have railed at Pennsylva- nia because she has permitted a man who is owned by another, to to be her Governor. What of all the States in the Union and the federal government now? Why soon the grand old Eagle of the Republic will refuse to subsist on such carrion as we are. Let us hide our heads in shame while the world reads the head lines in last Sunday’s papers, setting forth that HANNA was un- decided as to whom to pick for Vice-Presi- dent. — Philadelphia would doubtless like to have a little of that Porto Rican tariff idea to pervade the $100,000 she is trying to raise to secure the Republican National Convention. The raising of such an amount would be very easy if it had that McKINLEY hand back idea to it, but the Philadelphians are smart enough to see that any amount, however great, will be all consumed and there will be nothing to hand back when HANNA and his crowd get at it. —The hall of fame which some unknown gentleman has just offered to build for the University of New York, ata cost of $100,- 000, is to be merely a gorgeous receptacle for tablets bearing the names of illustrious Americans. Fifty names are to be selected in 1900 and thereafter but one each year. The public is not supposed to know who would erect such a temple in which success might find its crown of laurel, but we wouldn’t be a bit surprised if it might not be the work of the Honorable TIMOTHY WOODRUPF, anent the time when he be- comes Vice-President. —There seems to be a little gall with the sweets of this McKINLEY prosperity too. In New York, Chicago, Orange, Greenwich, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Pittsburg, Dun- cannon and Charleston, great strikes of skilled mechanics and laborers are on and they threaten to extend to all branches of trades in those cities. What, with the Porto Rican outrage, the Philippine blunder, the ALGER and CORBIN phantoms, more does the poor President need to drive all hope of re-election from his mind, than these beginnings of serious disaffections among the great wage earning classes. —A correspondent in the Lewisburg Jour- nal recently concluded an article explain- ing why he had abandoned the Republican party after clinging to it for twenty years by signing it as ‘‘A Democrat of the New Democracy.” The party and its principles are as old as the government itself. It stands to-day just where it stood one hun- dred and twenty-four years ago, so far as its foundation of personal liberty, social equality and government by the people is concerned. The attempts of those who want to lose sight of the fact that ours is not an aristocratic despotism to make it ap- pear that Democracy has wandered from its original tenets may have made some be- lieve that there is a ‘‘new Democracy,’ but euch is not the case. The same glor- ious doctrines laid down by JEFFERSON inspire the organization and even during the great progress made in all conditions of politics and society they have not fallen short of comprehending the truest ideals Bmore. | of a Republic. A Prosperity That is Not for the People. Evidently there is not that prosperity in the country that Republican papers would have the public believe, or, if there is, it is not the kind that brings plenty and con- tentment to all classes of our citizens. Strikes certainly are not an evidence of prosperity. And to-day there are more strikes threatened. more strikes in full operation, and more strikes in the process of settlement, than have been known in this country since 1892. For months past soldiers have been on duty in the Couer d’ Alene mining district, trying to settle a strike that has been on there for almost a year. For over three months the carpenters and masons, brick- layers and painters of Chicago, have been striking for wages that will allow them a decent living in these times of trust prices for everything their necessities require. - It is but a few weeks since one of the longest and most bitter strikes that ever occurred in the coal regions of this State came to a close at Arnot. Only last Friday three men were shot in a riot, among strikers and others who were takin, their places, out in Jefferson county. The same day one thou- sand miners at Cumberland, Maryland; eighteen hundred at Beaver Dam, Ken- tucky; and eight hundred at Carbondale, this State; decided to quit work until living wages were paid them. On Tuesday seven- teen hundred carpenters, stone masons and other builders mechanics, of Essex county, New Jersey, joined the great army of dis- contented workingmen,and since then thou- sands of others in different parts of the country have been holding meetings pre- paratory to doing the same thing. Through all New England mills are shut down be- cause of the refusal of labor to accept the paltry wages offered, under the present boasted prosperity, and all over the coun- try, except in the iron manufacturing dis- tricts, the same threatening condition of affairs exists. And as it is with the day laborers and workingmen, so is it with the farmer. While Republican newspapers and partisans are attempting to make helieve that the country is prosperous they are spending troublous days and sleepless nights trying to devise schemes to keep out of the clutches of the sheriff. Everything they are compelled to purchase, has, through the manipulation of Republican trusts, ad- vanced from twenty-five to one hundied per cent. while the products of their acres have either remained stationary or decreas- ed in price. With these conditions of affairs existing among the workingmen and farmers, what effrontery it is to talk about prosperity to them. They are not prosperous, or there would not be the discontent among the laboring people there now is, or the hard times for farmers that they have a right to complain of. Mr. McKINLEY’S prosperity may be a good thing for some interests. Trusts and great corporations are 1iding fast and furious on the road to wealth that it opens up to them. Monopolies may be able to grind out of the populace riches at a more rapid rate than usual. Special interests may be swelling their riches under its operations, but for the people—the great working, waiting, hoping masses—this Republican prosperity, so far, is little more than wind. The evidence of this isin the wrinkled bellies, the ragged-backs and the discontent of the workingmen, and in the empty pockets and growing store accounts of the farmer. ——TIt was more than the name FI1TZ- SIMMONS that made the Democratic State Convention at Harrisburg yesterday slip along so smoothly. A Cowardly Desertion. Now that “BULL’”’ ANDREWS, who has been the chief flag waver in the QUAY pro- cession, and the trusted oil-can carrier for the QUAY machine, has met an overwhelm- ing defeat, the whole horde of little QUAY quackers throughout the State come to the front with the same cackle :—That it was not because of his QUAY connections but in consequence of his own unpopularity that he went down. Some of them go so far as to charge that, for years, he has been a discredited representative of the State boss and that his posing as the manager of the state machine was political egotism of the most insolent character. Possibly ANDREWS was just what these people say he was, but if the result of his contest had turned out differently, what a different opinion we would have had from them. Then his success would have been a QUAY victory from beginning to end, and ANDREWS the chosen instrument through which it was secured. There is nothing measlier in the whole long list of measly Republican politics, than a failure to stand by a friend when he is down, and the effort of the QUAY crowd, now, to disown the political corpse of one of its own leaders before it is given decent burial, is an exemplification of a moral cowardice that would shame a sneak-thief. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. Wasted Efforts. That complaint should be made, to Mr. McKINLEY’S Secretary of State, by the Red Cross Society, that medicine, surgical supplies, bandages, etc., forwarded from this country to the sick and wounded Boers, have been held up by the British is not surprising. But that he should be ex- pected to enter the protest of the govern- ment or in any way show that this admin- istration disapproves of such acts on the part of its English allies, is looking for something that will never be realized. From the day the British authorities de- termined to blot the little Republics of South Africa from the maps of the world, there has been no more pliant tool or sub- servient supporter of that power than President MCKINLEY. The exporters of this country found that out when their ves- sels, ladened with American wheat, were seized by British officials in Delagoa bay on suspicion that their cargoes were intended for the Boer markets. It was verified by the refusal of customs officers, acting under orders from Washington, to clear vessels carrying medicine, nurses or supplies of any kind, for the relief of the Boers. It was again verified by the en- couragement extended to the equipment of the hospital ship Maine, and the rushing of that vessel, with its scores of nurses and its ample supplies, to the relief of wounded Englishmen, at the same time that similar aid for the suffering Boers was prevented leaving this country. It was shown again in the refusal, or fear, of the administra- tion to require its Secretary of State to de- mand full and ample apology of the Brit- ish government for the unwarranted inter- ference of its underlings with the United States mails, and the opening and exam- ination of the official correspondence be- tween this government and its representa- tion in distant consulships. It is proven now, beyond the hope of explanation, by the resignation of WEBSTER DAvis, Mr. MCKINLEY’S Assistant Secretary of the Interior, who gives up his place that he may be free to tell the wrongs and outrages that the British government is perpetra- ting on a people struggling to maintain self government, and to give to the Ameri- can public facts as he found them while in South Africa, which, as an official under Mr. McKINLEY, he is not allowed to do. The Red Cross Society will find no sympathy in the quarter it has appealed to. It is wasting its time making com- plaint to Sect. HAY. He, like the Presi- dent, has neither time nor attention to give to a subject of this kind. ' Their sympathies are with the English, in its efforts to blot out the last vestige of Re- publican government in South Africa, and their efforts will be put forth to that end. It is England’s desire, if not de- mand, that it shall be so, and what Eng- land desires ordemands of Mr. MCKINLEY it will get. Itis a blistering shame that such is the case, but the people must bear it, for the people are responsible for MCKINLEY, as MCKINLEY is responsible for HAY. A Pointer for Both Andrews and the People. “Bull”? ANDREWS knows now how if goes to run up against a machine. He may not be, politically, quite as much cock of the walk as he was this time last week, nor may he appear so immaculate and im- portant to his admirers, but he has reason to be a much wiser man than he was then. He knows now what it is to go through the political thresher, and understands how it feels to be scratched and ripped and torn,and broken and generally chawed up in a way that makes the remains worthless for any- thing but to enlarge the scrap heap. He has a much wider knowledge of public sentiment, and has reason to appreciate the fact that QUAY-ism is not as potent as it was or is far from being the talisman of success that he imagined it to be. In addition he has learned that crooked meth- ods and desperate resorts do not always win and that corruption in politics is a game that two sides can work at. We don’t know that the defeat of AN- DREWS will, for the present, either purify or better the politics of Allegheny county. The machine that downed him is but an off-shoot, and possibly n' better than the one be managed for the state boss. Both will resort to any means and profit by any rascality. Both will corrupt the public in order to control and rob it. But when two machines meet in open conflict, one or the other must be broken and the power of both lessened. In this is the hope of the people; in this the brightening of the pros- pects of future release from the domination of rings, the corruption of machines, and the profligacy and extravagance that fol- lows in their wake. That Mr. QUAY, with his state machine, will not be able to control Allegheny coun- ty, in the next Legislature is now certain. Mr. ANDREWS disastrous failure forecasts that. For this, if for no other reason, the people of the State have reason to rejoice ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. BELLEFONTE, PA., APRIL 6. 1900. Where the Responsibility Rests. That the Republican party will resort to murder for the purpose of maintaining power and securing the emoluments of office, is a pretty tough charge to make. Yet there are facts that go to prove its truth, and court records, in at least two States of the Union, that furnish substan- tiating evidence of the strongest character. In Kentucky the evidence is undeniable, and must stand unimpeached, that the cowardly assassination of the Democratic Governor-elect, was a cold-blooded, delib- erate, political murder—committed by Re- publicans for the sole purpose, and in the hope, of perpetuating Republican power, and securing for Republican heelers the emoluments of official positions. There was no personal animosity in it ; no neigh- borhood feud to incite it; no individual wrong about it ; no intent to protect pub- lic interesis or save public honor by it. It was nothing but a deliberately concocted and cowardly carried out conspiracy to prevent Republican defeat and to satisfy Republican greed. On Thursday of last week the closing scenes of another act, showing the extent to which Republican teachings and the ra- paciousness of Republican desires will cause men to go, was witnessed at Glen- dive, Montana. It was the hanging of a Republican sheriff for the assassination of his successful Democratic rival, in order that a vacancy might be created, to which he hoped to be appointed. In 1898, a Republican by name of HURST and a Democrat by name of CAVANAUGH were the respective party candidates for the office of sheriff. CAVANAUGH was successful by a small majority. A few days after the result was announced his dead body was found in an alley where he had been assassinated. The board of County Commissioners were Republicans and HURST was at once given the office. Circumstances connected with the finding of the body and the indecent haste of the Republicans to claim the office caused an investigation to be made, which ended, on Thursday lass, with the hanging of HURST as the chief plotter and participant ina conspiracy to obtain office by resorting to murder. It is scarcely right to hold the Republican party, as a party, responsible for these erimes. But it has taught that any means that secure its success are justifiable and out of such teachings have sprung the har- vest of criminality and disgrace that it is now reaping. For these teachings, and the encouragement it has given to desperate men to believe that anything is right that assists in its success, it should be held to a strict accountability. ——When they undertake to reform mat- ters down in Berks county they go about it just as if they meant it. The other day the county Auditors filed their report and when the county Treasurer and out-going board of county Commisiioners got a chance to look over it they found the modest sum of over $3,000 sur-charged to them, which they will be compelled to refund to the coun- ty. Inaddition, criminal charges have been preferred against these ex-officialsand in ad- dition to the disappointment of having to disgorge the amount of public money illegal- ly used, the whole party stands a chance of trying the hospitality and stomach resting diet of the county jail. We always have admired the way they do thingsin ‘‘Moth- er Berks, ’’ and have no reason now to think differently of the purposes that actuate, or the process adopted by the people of that county in making honest officials. ——1It is timely, in view of the approach of Arbor day, to call attention to an old act of assembly which provides ‘‘thatany per- son liable to road tax who shall trans- plant along public highway on his own premises any fruit, shade or forest trees of suitable size shall be allowed by the super- visor whose roads run through or adjoin- ing cultivated fields, in abatement of his road tax, $1 ,or every four trees set out.” The abatement, however, is limited to one- fourth of such person’s road tax each year. Here is an incentive for the observation of Arbor day in the country. ——Next Friday will be the anniversary of the birth of THOMAS JEFFERSON the father of the Declaration of Independence. Will some one please call at the White House that morning and tell its inmate that there was such a statesman as JEF- FERSON, and that we havesuch an heritage as a Declaration of Independence. —-—The Porto Rican bill passed the Senate on Tuesday by a majority of nine votes. While this is the end of the bill, so far as the Senate is concerned, there is like- ly to be an aftermath of it that will prove a horrible nightmare to the Republican party in years to come. --—Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. The Lives That Coal Mining Costs. From the Huntingdon News. The forthcoming report of James Roder- ick, chief of the State Bureau of Mines and Mining, will contain some interesting data in regard to the loss of life in mine acci- dents during the past 30 years. During the period from 1870 to 1879 the average yearly loss of life was 215 ; in the period from 1880 to 1889 the average yearly loss was 312, while during the past ten years the average yearly loss has been 430. In the past thirty years the large number of 9,575 men have lost their lives in the an- thracite coal mines of this State. In 1870 for every 59,870 tons of coal mined one life was lost. In 1880, ten years later, the largest tonnage was produced per life lost, 182,987. The total anthracite coal mined during the past ten years was 70,242,510 tons, in the production of which 4,305 min- ers lost their lives. In the opinion of Mr. Roderick, the anthracite mine law of this State is the best in the world, and this great loss of life is not due to any defect in the law, but principally to neglect on the part of the employes. The tabulated stape- ment will show a vast reduction in the number of lives lost now in comparison with thirty years ago, when 36,600 men were employed at the same occupation in which to-day upwards of 140,509 earn their daily bread. Cigarettes and Whisky. From the Wilkesbarre Union Leader. To say that cigarette smoking is worse than whisky drinking might seem a little harsh, especially to the ears of the cold water advocates, but that Chief Moore, of the weather bureau, regards them so is evidenced by what he says in reference to his recent order prohibiting the smoking of cigarettes during office hours. He is quoted as follows : ‘Men who use cigarettes seem to become deadened to the fact that neglect of duty means reproval, suspension or expulsion. I had rather have in the service a man who drinks a quart of whisky every 24 hours than a confirmed cigarette smoker. The former can be trusted when the latter cannot. Cigars and pipes are not barred.’”” This isn’t of much value as a temperance lecture, but it ought to open the eyes of the parents of children who are given to toying with the seductive cig- arette. A Congress that Will Do Anything. From the Washington Star. The house of representatives recently gave an illustration of how to complicate the pension problem. “It constituted it- self a board of appeals, swept away-the statutes and the rulings of the. pension bu- reau, ignored the equities which are sup- posed to protect the rights of both the pen- sioners and the government and passed 142 private pension bills, aggregating an in- crease to the pay rolls of $3,153 % nionth, or $37,716 a year. It is impossible to know what percentage of these cases de- served such a special treatment, but the fact that they have previously been 'un- able to pass the scrutiny of the pension bureau is excellent evidence that they are in the main unworthy of particular toler- ance.”’ Forgotten That There Was a Jefferson. From the Delaware County Democrat. On April 13th will occur the an- niversary of the birth of Thomas Jefferson, founder of Democracy and author of the Declaration of Independence. In view of the crushing out of liberty among the Frave Boers in South Africa and the at- 12mpt made to have our country abandon many of the immortal doctrines of the Declaration of Independence, by our im- perialistic President, ‘is not the time op- portune for unusual demonstrations of fidelity to those doctrines by the people? The Porto Rican Tariff and Civil Government Bill Adopted by the Senate Tuesday. ‘WASHINGTON, April 3.—This was a no- table day in the United States Senate. It brought to a close one of the sharpest and most prolonged debates upon any measure since those discussed in the ‘‘memorable war Congress’’ two years ago. At 4 o'clock this afternoon the vote was begun upon the Puerto Rican tariff and civil govern- ment bill and the pending amendment and less than an hour later the measure about which there has been so much contention in and out of Congress, was passed by a majority of nine, the final vote being 40 to 31. Only committee amendments were a- dopted. It has been evident for some time that the bill would command a majority in the Senate, but notwithstanding that fact the interest in the measure, both of Senators and of the public, has not flagged anin- stant. To-day the galleries were crowed- and hundreds of people filled corridors, un able even to secure standing room in the galleries. From 11 o'clock, when the Sen- ate convened, until the hour when the voting began, advocates and opponents of tha bill brilliantly and eloquently main- tained their convictions and the auditors were kept in a state of constant excite- ment. The particularly notable speeches of the day were delivered by Mr. Mason, of Illinois, in opposition to the measure, and by Mr. Forager, of Ohio, who replied to a brief speech by Mr. Wellington, of Maryland. It was the Ohio Senator’s de- sire to clear up any misunderstanding or misinformation concerning the bill. Mr. Mason’s speech was argumentative eloquent and amusing by turns, and, as it covered the entire range of the country’s duties and responsibilities to what the Illi- nois Senator sarcastically termed ‘our in- su-lar pos-ses-sions,’’ it was very interest ing to his hearers. Just before the Senate adjourned, a sen- atorial episode occurred, in which Mr. Wol- cott, of Colorado, accused Mr. Lodge, of Massachusetts, of uttering that which was “anqualifiedly false.” The difficulty arose over an effort made by Mr. Lodge to have the Spooner bill made the unfinished bus- iness. This involved the displacement of the Quay case, and the friends of the former Senator from Pennsylvania made things lively for half an hour. Spawls from the Keystone. —Clearfield is to have a new hospital. A meeting of prominent citizens was held re- cently and an organization effected. —In the school district of New Paris, Bed- ford county, the measles are epidemic, 102 cases being reported and three deaths. —A few nights ago thieves broke into the jewelry store of A. G. Rugh at New Alex- andria, Westmoreland county, and stole valuables amounting to $200. —The Patton Clay Brick Manufacturing company is building an addition to its plant at Patton. The new building will be of brick and 12x30 feet in size. — While George Pearson and ‘‘Pikey’” Bloom were engaged in a friendly wrestling bout in Lewistown Friday Pearson fell under Bloom and the former sustained a fracture of one of his legs. —John B. Smith, of Vail. who lost his arm by an accident in the Tyrone division yard on the 7th of July last, has been appointed switch tender at the Summit and assumed the duties of the place Monday. This will be the first work he has done since the acei- dent occurred. —Mrs. Mary Ferguson, of New Bloom- field, died recently at the home of her son- in-law, ex-Senator Charles H. Smiley, in her 93rd year. Until a short time ago Mrs. Ferguson was in the best of health and re- tained all her faculties except sight. For sev- eral years ber eyes were slightly impaired. —Miss Kate Klema had never seen a gas jet until she went to work in Jacob Fisher's house, Johnstown, Wednesday. Members of the family instructed her in its operation. During the night she grew curious and evi- dently opened the valve. She was found dead in bed next morning. —Frank Hinkel, employed at the Standard Steel works, of Lewistown, while working in the steel furnace department Friday placed his left hand on the track of one of the elec- tric cranes, when his hand was caught under the wheels of the crane, crushing off the fingers and so crushing the hand that ampu- tation at the wrist was necessary. —The Indiana Gazette says that on last Saturday Bigler Bros., of Clearfield filed for record in the recorders office in that county deeds for twelve tracts of coal in Canoe township, aggregating about 768 acres. The price paid was $38.70 per acre’ and is the highest yet paid in Indiana county, as the coal is said to be the best in the county. —A fine new Methodist church was dedicat- ed at Punxsutawney recently, which has a seating capacity, including the Sunday school room, of 1,200, It cost $35,000 and could not be duplicated now for $40,000. Bishop C. C. McCabe was present and succeeded in raising the $8,000 needed to pay all bills very easily. The organ will be furnished by Andrew Car- negie and will be one of the best. -—For some months past the Huntingdon and Broad Top railroad has been experiment- ing with the system of running its trains by telephone and General Manager Carl M. Gage has announced his purpose to adopt the system permanently. It is claimed for it that its use largely reduces the possibility of errors in the transmission of train orders and reports over the method of the telegraph. _ —A dispatch from Pittsburg says the first woman lodger in the McKees Rocks police station appeared Wednesday night. She was accompanied by her husband, who gave his name as William Conroy and his. occupation as a laborer. They have traveled on foot and freight trains from Topeka, Kansas, according to the woman’s statement, and are bound for Lock Haven. They have been on the road since last October. —The proposed Buffalo branch of the Penn- sylvania Railroad will run through Bradford. It will start at Wilcox, Pa., and follow a route across the ridges by the way of Lafay- ette, McKean county. In that vicinity it will cross a deep and mountainous gorge with a steel viaduct nearly five hundred feet high. The bridge will be over three thousand feet in length and its construction will be one of the greatest engineering feats on record. It will be the highest bridge in the world. —The work on the electric lighting of the Gallitzin tunnel has been completed. Two hundred incandescent lamps, arranged along either side of the tunnel at a uniform dis- tance apart, have been putin and they fur- nish excellent illumination. A private plant has been established for the lights. It is the purpose of the Pennsylvania Railroad com- pany to equip most of the large tunnels along its lines with electric lights. This has been done in a majority of cases, but there remain a few tunnels yet to be equipped. — David Lansberry, a carpenter in the em. ploy of Harbison-Walker Co., the well known fire brick manufacturers at Woodland, is ly- ing at the poiut of death at his home in the latter place, the result ofa serious accident which happened to him on Wednesday after- un n of last week. While engaged n put- ting in some new timbers under the *‘tweer”’ machine, he stepped aside just as the eleva- tor was coming down with a load of brick and was struck on the shoulder by an extended bolt which erushed him down, in a backward position, with the result that his back was broken. Several physicians have been con- stantly at his side in the hope of saving his life, but they say he has only one chance out of ten. He is a married man, aged about 43 years, and besides his wife has one daughter and one son. —The body of George M. Wilson,son of E.S. Wilson, formerly of Philipsburg was brought home from the Philippines and buried at Cur- wensville the other day with military honors. On December 10th, 1898, he enlisted in Co E, 12th, U. S. Infantry at Clearfield. His regi- ment was ordered to the Philippines, April 14th, 1899, they landed in Manila and were immediately assigned to active duty. Young Wilson with five others were out on a scout- ing expedition along the Pasig river the lat- ter part of April. On returning to camp they were fired upon by the enemy hidden along the river Lank. It will probably never be known just how the accident happened, as every one was anxious to get out of the boat to cover, but in the scramble young Wilson was drowned in the river. His body was re- covered and buried in Manila. His parents and friends corresponded with the War De= partment and finally got the body sent home, arriving at Curwensville last Saturday night | The deceased was born in Philipsburg in June, 1881.