: —The bloomer girl and the shirt waist man Are likely birds of a feather, But no one that we have heard about _ Has eaught them flocking together. There will be a few less ancestor wor- shipers in China by the time the allied "forces reach Pekin. —With regard to the troubles in China the duty is plain enough; but the doing of it is a little too hilly. There are many towns in England where thunder has never been heard and the timid may live in peace, that is so long as they prohibit the introduction of such substitutes as TEDDY ROOSEVELT. —The last contingent of German soldiers left Bremerhaven for the Orient on Satur- day evening, but, strange to say, the Em- peror did not makea speech. Can it be that he has run out of either wind or sand? —The Philippines send us a weekly re- minder that the war is not as near over as the imperialists would have us believe. Officers and privates are being killed right along, but they are the digestive ‘pellets we have to take to carry out this idea of t‘henevolent assimilation.’’ —Out of ten thousand bicycles in Scran- ton only two thousand were returned by the assessors for taxation under the new side-path law. The only natural conclu- sion is that there are just eight thousand liars who own bicycles in Scranton. Let us see, what is that other story ahout Scranton ? —1It is rumored that Capt. JOHN A. DALEY doesn’t propose to have the Repub- lican relegate him to the rear asa. legisla- tive possibility. But what is he going to do about it? The Republican is the official party organ in the county and if it says he isa ‘‘dead one’ they might just as well have a funeral oat in Curtin township. — Major ARMES, the retired United States army officer, who won unenviable |: ‘otoriety for himself by pulling General BEAVER’S nose when the latter was Gov- ernor of Pennsylvania, is the victim of a pulling episode himself now. Miss ELLA ‘M., PLATT, an artist in Washington, has instituted a breach of promise suit against the pyrotechnical old Major and threatens to “‘pull his leg’ for $50,000 -—Former Speaker of the House, the Hon. THOMAS BRACKET REED, has de- clared that he will take no part in the com- ing campaign and the Pittsburg Dispatch observes that it makes little difference since he is not the issue. That is probably ‘the very cause of his indifference. ‘When THOMAS was in the House he was the ‘whole thing and now that imperialism | has "become paramount lie is loath to fall in with it when there is no longer a chance of ‘being the Czar. It is little wonder that the people of Porto Rico hissed and were unresponsive when the few Americans on that island tried toget up a demonstration for the Fourth of July. They could scarcely have been expected to cheer much over the en- thusiasm of those who were celebrating their freedom, especially when these same liberty enthusiasts have proven almost as tyrannical to Porto Rico as were the Span- iards. They welcomed our advancing army; thinking that we would bring them territorial government, the constitution and relief from Spanish oppression. Presi dent McKINLEY has given them pothiog— not even the relief. i —It isn’t a very great step, in pointet cul- pability, between the murdering of Ameri- can missionaries by the “Heathen Chinee’’. and the mobbing of the missionaries of the church of Zion by the Christian people of | Mansfield, Ohio. In fact it hardly seems possible that the semi-civilized Chinaman will be held to the same accountability that “the enlightened Mansfielders will for hav- _ ing stoned the Zion ‘missionaries, stripped ‘them and painted them with blue paint. No matter how distasteful ‘the Zionist faith ‘might have been to them the people of Mansfield placed themselves. “about on the same level with the Chinaman when they ‘acted as they did. | —The reception that was given Lt. Gen. MILES at Mt. Gretna, on. ‘Monday, was ‘enough to assure any one that if McKINLEY “and Roor are afraid to let him go to China there are thousands who are “glad to have _bim at home. Mt Gretna had sunshine for “the great soldier, while Bellefonte showered “rain on him all day ‘jong, but either of such _ conditions were probably welcom- edas a pleasant exchange for the .an- just frost’ ‘he gets from tion in Washington. MILES is a soldier “and for that reason they have no use for | “him in his proper place at the head of the | army. Contract ‘manipulators and promo- ters of favorite sons of wealthy ‘nobodies “are useful in the army these “days and JHANNAS sees. that they are there. tee Re Milwaukee trolley. car. motorman hag ‘just been the vietim of an accident "similar to the one that befell the girl whose celluloid hair comb caught fi fire at a funeral in Nittany valley some time ago and near- ly burned her head off. The Milwaukee “warning is to wearers of celluloid collars. H passenger standing behind the motor- man accidentally touched his collar with a bs cigar. There was a puff, a flash fh the ‘motorman’s neck was encircled th fame. ‘Tt was a frightful, thongh It a predicament, and was Sufficient to cause an order to be issued by a Chicago So we corporation prohibiting employes from ‘wearing celluloid collars. ~~ They "are neither comfortable, vor pretty, nor * clean and it is a questionable economy that “the administra ji STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. ‘Fresh Encouragement” and Its Comse- quences. “It is not that there is any danger that Mr. Bryax, if elected, would nndertake to tamper with the gold standard law. That is. a mere cry of partisan calamity howlers. But there is no question that the election of Mr Bry AN would give fresh en- couragement, not merely to the champions of the dying cause of free silver, but to all the lingering believers in Greenbackery and other devices of irredeemable currency.— Philadelphia Record. For the sake of saving words and the time that would be lost in an effort to con- vince those who have set their heads against conviction, we will admit that the above, in its fullest significance, is true. And admitting that itis, how thin, how very thin, must be the excuses made by those who pretend to be Democratic on all other questions, for opposing the election of BRYAN, because of the money question. The Record is one that lias taken this position, It acknowledges that his elec- tion would not ‘‘endanger, the gold stand- ard; it would only give ‘fresh encourage- ment’’ to the “dying cause of free silver.” And suppose it would, how would that weigh against the ‘encouragement’ Mo- KINLEY’S election would give to the press- ing, dangerous, living issues, that threaten us to-day? 5 With McKINLEY successful would not “‘fresh encouragement’’ he extended to im- perialism to go on in its fight for'one man- power—for its standing armies and even increasing taxation—for the abridgment of constitutional requirements and the destruction of constitutional rights ? Would not ‘‘fresh encouragement’ be given to militarism in its demands for greater powers; the rule of the army; its right of conscription; and its complete supremacy over civil authority ? Would not ‘fresh encouragement,” for the imposition and continuation of tariff taxation with its special benefits for the few and its increased burdens for the many, be given by his success ? Would it not be ‘‘fresh encouragement’’ to the trusts, we are now cursed with, and inspire new combinations of capital to assist in orgshing individual enterprises and personal endeavor? Would not embalmed beef contractors; stale medicine supplyers; shoddy goods manufacturers; spesulators in rotten trans- ports; postal’ e EcANS, the army of governmental highwaymen, politic- al black-legs and publie robbers, that have ‘been bred and fostered under the rule of HANNA and by the grace of McKINLEY, be given new hope and * ‘fresh encouragement’’ to continue their outrages upon those at the mercy of their departments and their pillage of a treasury placed at their dis- posal ? How about “fresh enconragements 2’! to these ? Is a “dying cause” or fear of interference importance than the preservation of Re- publican government ! The continuation of constitutional au- thority ! ‘The promotion and defense of individual effort ! The rights of the people and the per- _petuity of the principle upon which the Republic was builded ? He must be a mercenary indeed who, to save an imaginary war upon the value of his dollars, would give fresh. encourage- ment fo a cause that seeks and threatens the destruction of all that has made his government, good, great or glorious. : And yet: this is: the position that the Hooord, and its lonesome following of gold ‘standard Democrats, must occupy it we understand aright. its “fresh _encounrage- ment theory. sp J — Looking Fors New Liars. Whether or not the the report i is correct that chairman HANNA has offerded WEE CHENG, the Shanghai liar, a desk in his campaign literary bureau, and with a salary that would exceed any sum the Emperor of China could pay him, we do | probably turn out to be such. { There i is one thing | that is true in “this line, and that is, that if the. past and pres- ent policy of that bureau is to be continued some new liars are needed. The old ones seem completely worn out. Jdabored so persistently and so. long that everything they send out now gives evi- dence of a mental incapacity and a pbysic- al weakness, t that overwork always brings. Their productions are worn thread-bare and’ when not that are either idiotic or musty. ‘This Mr. HANNA knows as well as do the people generally. “And he knows t00, that unless he can get new life. and a little originality into that department his campaign “will prove'a flat failure. ~~ Ibis Republican necessities that demand a lot of new liars to back their efforts and CHENG, if not a new one in his own coun- try, would be a new and original one here. With his abilities his services would be invaluable and we don’t ‘wonder that out of the millions Mr. HANNA has -as a cam- n fand, he is willing to pay liberally to Pig ANANIAS who can give his tottering prompts people to wear them. cause a hope of success. RATHBONES, the NEELYS—and the whole | *2 | It is because they know and have felt what with the intrinsic value of a dollar of more | not know. It is given as true and may § They have | Why the German Vote Revolts Against Republicanism. It is not to be wondered at that Repub- licans are uneasy and uncertain about the German vote, nor is it strange that this, with them, should be the particnlarly doubtful quantity to be considered in the pending campaign. For many years the bulk of that vote, | believing that the Republican party was the advocate and representative of Repub- lican principles, has been as solid for that party as is the colored vote of the south. It has given to it all the majorities it bas had to boast of in Indiana, Illinois, Michi- gan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota for the past ten years. But it looks as if it would be so no long- er. They see under the asses’ skin that cov- ers Republicanism the form, and claws of the imperial lion. Nine tenths of the Germans who bave emigrated to and become citizens of this country, broke up home ties and left rela- tives and friends in the old world to escape the merciless conscription and the unbear- able tax burdens that an imperial govern- ment requires. They know what imperial- ism means. They bave seen their young boys dragged from their homes and schools and forced into service through a conscrip- tion that heeds nothing but the necessities of the army and the orders of the Emperor. They have seen homes broken up, decrepid parents left in want, helpless sisters rob- bed of suppors and wives and little chil- dren turned into public paupers that able bodied men might be had for military serv- ice. They have felt the crushing weight of ‘taxation that it has taken to maintain that army and enforce the imperial policy that stood back of it. They know it all. They have expe- rienced its workings. They understand its purposes and have seen its results. To them it is as a terrible nightmare and the closer they get to it again the more horri- ble it appears. Under the plausible pretext of ‘‘expan- sion’ and ‘‘following the flag’ we are ap- proaching these same conditions. None know or see this more plainly than do the German voters. None understand or ap- preciate. its fearful meaning better than they. imperalism is; because they see and under- stand how rapidly we are nearing its home destroying conscription and its: poverty entailing taxation, that makes them first hesitate, then protest and finally revolt against a party and a policy that is work- to this end. Under the circumstances it is not strange that the German vote is leaving the Re- poblican party and now threatens its com- plete overthrow. He must be a dolt indeed, who imagines that intelligent men would flee their ba- tive country to escape the results of im- perialism and then vote to inflict its bur- dens and its horrors upon the country of their adoption. ——These terribly hot, humid, hadez suggesting days are not the only reminders that Sirius is ascendant and that dog days are on. There are numerous other little incidents that recall the popular idea that now is the time to get hives, iteh and all those kindred skin pleasantries: that the dog star showers on us.’ For instance, out on Linn street on Monday, one of the most popular. canines, and certainly the boss bully of the street, started in. to have his ‘day and licked up something less than a gallon of fly poison that was sitting about the house in sundry saucers. Of course the entire household was thrown into a furore of excitement, but the dog soon re- gretted the dose and it issaid that the only thing that kept him from turning clear in- side out was the presence of mind that had suggested tying a knot in his tail. | The Democratic Cake is Not all Dough. ' The Philadelphia Press, in one of its spells of political liberality, generously concedes to the Democrats the ‘election of one Congressman from this State—the nominee of the Berks-Lehigh district. This is altogether unexpected. From the per- sistent assertions made by that paper about | the wonderful growth (2) of the ‘‘Inde- pendente, and the opposition to Democracy, we had come to fear that old Berks even bad become a wobbler, and was liable to be found in the doubtful column. We are glad to know that it is not. Pleased to pieces to ‘understand that the Denioeracy has one county conceded it and one To- cality in which it has an acknowledged foot-hold. Thanks to the Press—a thou- sand thanks for this enconragement and consolation. And now that it bas the Democratic party of the State corralled in a single connty and has QUAY beaten out of his boots, as well as’ ‘his bossism, won’t this enlightened and ‘liberal purveyor of polit- ical facts give wus a short’line on the Cuban postal scandals of which its editor in chief ought to know much. It may possibl y be as well informed on this as itis upon the subject of congressional elections. features | BELLEFONTE, PA., AUG. 10, 1900. Revealing their Own Shame. = If the Republican party is the party of intelligence, learning and enlightenment, as it has always so pretentiously boasted, what is the use, or where the consistency, in the fuss it is now making about apply- ing the educational test to voters, as is be- ing done in the South? , Surely a law that will disfranchise the oramus who can neither read nor write, who refuses all opportunities to better s conditien in such respects, should not t the right to vote of any member of that organization. Such a thought would be out of the question. Republican voters, according to Republican boasts and Re- publican pretenses, are the intelligent, edu- cated, learned men of the country. Igpo- rance to them is a stranger and illiteracy a crime. 2 Why then should they trouble if Lonis- ania and North Carolina have enacted. and other ‘Southern States purpose enacting, laws that prohibit the ballot to the un- lettered dolt who can’t tell a B from a bull's foot, or does not known the difference between a pot-hook and the autograph of the President ? Such a law certainly would not apply to those who have heen voting the Republican ticket (?) If their contentions have been correct its strict enforcement would only increase the chances of their carrying some of these States, and enable them to get a foot-hold upon territory that the infamy of their carpet-bag rule long since made untenable for the party responsible for it. Did any one ever hear of the Republican party or its press kick against anything that promised to benefit it? Not that we have ever heard of. To-day it is kicking like an army mule and scolding at a rate that would out-do a fish-woman, because illiteracy is to be pro- hibited the ballot, and ignorance banished from the polls. Don’t this, thoughtful and unprejudiced reader, strike you as a queer position for this party of boasted intelligence—this self- advertised head-light in’ the procession of progressiveness—to occupy ? Or does it simply prove the falsity of the claim it bas so pretentiously made, and ‘emphasize the truth that when yon strike at illiteracy and ignorance you afe ‘certain to hit Republican voters. ——Hon. W. C. LINGLE, of Patton, bas been renominated for Assembly by the Democrats of Cambria county. Mr. LIN- GLE'S election two years ago in the face of an ordinary Republican majority in the county was an attest of his popularity and he will have the additional advantage in this fall’s campaign of having made an ex- |. ceptionally satisfactory record in Harris- burg. Who? A week ago LI-HUNG CHANG, the old time friend of the American people, and of American interests in China, assured the authorities at Washington of the safety of the Representatives of this goverment: in Pekin. At the same time he warned them that the advance of the allied forces of which that portion of the American troops now in China are a part, would increase - the gravity of the situation and possibly re sult in the extermination of all foreigners in the imperial city. We refused to enter into negotiations for their safety. ' We charged Chinamen, with- out exception, with acting in bad faith. | We demanded that we be put in direct ‘communication with our representatives, and threatened the direst consequences if that was not done. Our demand was com- plied with. ‘And then without’ any attempt to save the lives of those who ed ns through diplomacy,’ in Gi face of the fact that war has not heen declared against China, our troops were ordered to advance with fire and sword to the resoune of those threatened § in the besieged sity. ih * Diplomacy right have ved. them. Tt : was not tried.’ Former friendship and assurances of good faith were spurned —tact a and state. craft were cast to the’ winds and the sword and bayonet, invasion and Noam upon. War has been begun. If those we are attempting to save. perish through the means we have adopted to res- cue and protect them, who will be to blame ? Who? I iiitnr Sat In Hot 31 flyin ——The most effective campaign docu- hens the’ Democrats ‘seen to ‘have gotten old of up to this time is ROOSEVELT'S St. — speech. It is referred to on all hands as a specimen of political asininity, ecer- tain to ‘convince even his’ warmest friends that the acquaintance who remarked just after his nomination was announced, *‘that the Republicans had secured ‘a candidate. who could make more: kinds of a d——d fool of himeelf than any man living” hada | very intimate knowledge of his capacity in | that line. It is not to he wondered at that Mr. HANNA is iusisting on giving his mouth a rest. I a i aad ARE ‘of emperor or to" exploiting a phantom. from the. Wilmington, : Hal; From the Baltimore Sun (Gold Dem.) . This year 1900 is the centennial anniver- sary year of the first election ol Jefferson to the Presidency, a ter coincidence itis the first year in which the paramounif whether the American people sha radical departure from the prineip Declaration of Independence afi Constitution framed - by the fathers Republic. Our children or ougehi children will rejoice or lament this decision. If we elect Me country will he irrevoeably comm the principles of imperialisin, and no man living will be wise enough to say in what part of Asia, Africa or Europe the rising generation of Americans may not be sum- moned by the tens of thousands to fight and die for the flag which Wash and the fathers of the Republic d ted to peace and ‘‘friendship with all nations and entangling alliances’ with none.” It is for the American voter of today to count the cost. - It will be useless for their children when they come of age to do so. Colonial empire will invite a combination of foreign powers to open fire on us when their inter- ests are involved. Our conscripts of that day will have to fight the battlesin our dis- tant possessions. think it all over between now and Novem- ber, and think of their little boys—the coming men of 1915 and 1920. What sort of country are they going to leave for their sons if they vote to imperialize it? Are they going to so use their votes this year that 15 years hence the new generation of voters will say with bitter, but vain, regret : ‘“‘Our fathers ate of the sour grapes of military glory and colonial empire building and their children’s teeth are set on edge. n Building an Empire From the York Gazette. The New York Journal hints that sonie- body has been copying Machiavelli ‘with- out giving due credit. It quotes from “The Prince,” a work of this famous diplomat : “The greatest emergencies,” says Machiavelli, “‘confront despots while they are laying the foundation of their power.. To enslave a free people a ruler must turn the general, atention away from domestic concerns. Let him seek foreign complications and distant wars. Strug- gles for dominion abroad distract attention from m what goes on at home. The most adroit policy for him who would become an absolute despot is to tell the people that he is making them prosperous. He must dazzle the popular mind with the expectation of riches. But as it is manifest that all will not attain riches, he must take care that some favored few h up enor- mous wealth. These favored few wil thus be detached from the people and become wholly devoted to himself.” No one is: so'silly as to assert or believe that McKinley aspires het fal title ‘anythi ‘nomi- nally than President. ¢ ro. even among his admirers, doubts that he enjoys the fact that he is practically dictator ‘of the Philippines. He has ‘exercised and is now exercising all the power that an emperor could have, and he is exercising it ina way such as Machiavelli suggests. He is abling a favor- ed few to heap up enormous wealth, and in order to keep himself and his friends in power he is distracting the attention of the people from domestic concerns and ig’ daz- gling the popular mind with expectation of riches. Emperor McKinley has no court. He can give no titles of nobility. There are no frills. But the imperial power ‘and the imperial opportunity are there. Used Only as a Searv-Crow. 5 From the Boston Globe. 33 2] a The managers of Mr. McKinley’s canvass for a second term apparently are planning ‘‘a business scare’’ as the most convenient ‘means to the end which. they have in view. In other words, they are doing their utmost ‘to make the country helieve that the free coinage of silver is involved in the resnlt of the election i in November, and are em- ploying premises and conclusions, ‘which are equally fictitious, There is not the shadow of a chance of any. financial _legis- Jation inimical to the existing system dur- ing the next presidential administration. The enactment of a. free-coinage law in that period will be a sheer impossibility, no Lat who is Chief Executive. - et : Frightened by, a Ghost. ‘From the ‘Washington Post, Ind. | ‘We are sure that: prosperity will: nob be | promoted by trying to frighten the souls of fearful capitalists with awful apprehen- sions of danger from the ghost of 16 to 1, which Mr. Bryan; with the able assistance of Prince David. shoved into the Kansas City platform. Better shout the prosperity chorus and stop fooling ‘with that grave; better stick to solid materiality and stop There. is no more danger of the 50-cent dollar of Mr. Bryan Par of the no-cent, fiat dollar of Wharton rker. mei A Question for “Gold” Democrats. | ant © From the Buffalo Cotrier—Giold Dem. id ‘Why should gold Derourate | d Mr. McKinley to a second election’ and perpet- uate new policies fraught with danger? By so doing gold Democrats will also sever the ties that bind them to the historic Democracy, and will create the beiief that their political attitude is not so muc. dic- tated hy principle as by an unreasonable autinathy for one. particular sandidate, Our dur Plain Duty. (Dem) The Philippine Iilands Meloni: to the people: who ‘inhabit them, and no ' course will vight the wrongs that have been ‘done them or make die reparation for ‘the in- justice and oppression’ they have ‘suffered at the hands of this country but the turn- ‘ing over to them of their rightful power ‘and anthority. Na subterfuge, no make- shift of anv Rind; with stand. in the Place of! a platy duty. The Paramount Issue. From the Toledo Bee, it was in 1800—the preservation of a Dem- ocratic Republic from the insidions en- croachmeuts of class rule. “Let our: 55h ous aun ; .one finger missing from the other. ‘train passed under, bind the bargain. Every Evening. i [dizziness and possibly ‘fainting spells. | pite his grievous hurts Editor Begley is rot The paramount issue of to-day is “what | depressed about himself. His woe is bound Spavis from the the Heystons,, {John Vocus, of White deer, et ‘with a painful accident on Thursday. While chop- ping in the woods his axe glanced from the tree he was cutting and striking him in the face almost severed his nose. —An accident occurred near Glasgow, Cam- bria county, Monday a week, in which Stew - art Ulery, 14 years old, discharged a shot- gun, injuring a Hungarian named Albert. It is reported the hoy 3 was shooting at mark. Albert will recover. —Tkte barn on the fara of Samuel Bierly two miles from Tylersville, Sugar Valley, Clinton county, was destroyed by fire early Friday morning. The crops stored in the barn were consumed, but it is stated that the live stock was saved. —James, the 11-year-old son of Frank Walls, store manager of the Webster store company at Ehrenfeld, was run over by a train of cars about 10:30 o'clock Saturday morning and died at noon from the terrible injuries received. —Wm. Coffroth, brother of General A. H. Coffroth, the well known Somerset county lawyer and Democratic politician died Sum- day morning at 6:30 o’clock at his home in Somerset. He was aged 85 years. He is sur- vived by a widow and severdl children. —Fred Huffman, of Windfall, Lycoming county, was riding a heifer, when he slipped off its back. His foot caught on a hook in the harness and the bey was dragged head | downward. Finally the hook was torn from his flesh, when the lad fell to the ground. He was badly bruised. —The Johnstown Democrat having heard that Dr. Geo. R. Glass, of South Fork, is be- ing urged by his friends to accept a senator- ial nomination on a fusion ticket, says: ‘Dr. Glass™is a radical Republican. He weighs about 300 pounds, and for that reason we will not say anything against him. —Abont six o'clock. Friday evening. the residenee of C. A. Thompson, of Irwin, was entered by thieves who ‘ransacked the house and carried away a purse belonging to Mrs. Thompson, containing $50 and some valuable papers. The house is in the central part of the town. The thief made good his escape, leaving no clue. —One of the boldest acts of vandalism on record in Blair county, occurred recently. One night Howard Estep, of Antis township, had a calf killed in his barnyard by an un- known party. The calf’s body was taken and the hide and head were left hanging on the fence. There is no clae fo the perpetra- tor or perpetrators. : ..—The large boarding %ouse’ at Munson’s station was demolished by # wreck on the Beech Creek railroad. An. eastbound ‘train sideswiped a west bound freight, which con- tact threw twenty-six cars of the track. The cars rolled down the embankment at that point and crashed into the building. No one was injured. The wreck occurred Saturday night. —A deserter from the United States regu- lar army, named Haman, was arrested, Thursday afternoon, at Osceola by a constable of that place, and was taken to the Clearfield Jail. to await the arrival of a detailed soldier who will'vettrn ‘him ‘66 an army ‘post for trial. It is Haman’s second offense, and with two '' 'desertions to his credit the trial is likely to go hard with him. =If a child born to Mr. and Mrs. Detrich , who lives near Fort London, lives until Sun- day'it will be six weeks old. The child, ‘which is as healthy as month-old babies usu - ally are, was born without nose or mouth, with three fingers missing from one hand and At ‘the place where the nose ought to be there is an opening leading into the palate. . —Professor Silas Wright, ex-county super - intendent of Perry county, and at present county surveyor, was dangerously, and it may be fatally injured,'at Millerstown sta- tion Wednesday morning. He was driving across the overhead bridge when a freight His horse frightened and ran away, throwing the professor out on his head.. He was picked up unconscious and taken to the N: tional ‘botel | in Millers town. loin i —Charles Hallo a an. oe of the Good Coal company at Pine: Hall, Somerset county, was beheaded about 2:30 o'clock Fri- ‘day afternoon while going to tarn a switch on the Berlin branch of the Baltimore and ‘Ohio railroad. Hoffman was riding on the pilot of the branch shifter with two railroad- ers, and when the engine was approaching the switch he jumped off sideways and was thrown back under the wheels of the moving locomotive, which passed: over his neck. 3 —Dr, Henry. L. ‘Donnelly, one of Lavrobe's pioneer vhysicians,died Friday morning from ‘Bright's disease. ' Dr. Donnelly was born nedr Derry, ‘Westmoreland | ‘county, in 1829. ‘He spent his entire professional life at La- trobe and was ‘considered ' ‘an authority on surgery. At the outhreak ‘of the civil war he enlisted in company K,, Eleventh Pennsylya- nia volunteers. In 1862 he was promoted to the captaincy of company G, One. Hundred and Thirty-fifth regiment, - SeTviAy to the close of the war. 3H pan suit bofore ‘Squire Tenahan. ‘of Cen- tralia, Thursday, for the recovery of $10 ‘brought out the fact that one Fralk Cassoco- ski, a ‘resident of Midvalley, had sold ‘bis daughter to Anthony Muscavich, of the same place for $150, the $10 ‘being. paid to When the girl of 18 years arrived at Midvalley from Russia, Anthony was not pleased with her appearance, hence the suit for the recovery: of the money: The ‘sum was returned and Friday father and daughter returned te Russia together. For the first time since he and his wife were struck and maimed by the freight “train at the Pennsylvania railroad depot in Johnstown on Wednesday, July 18th, «nd their little son. killed, Editor J. C. Begley Monday read, an account of the dreadful Lakemont excursion, catastrophe. He is fast ~improving in his condition. In the morn- ings and evenings he experiences no incon- ‘vehiente, but in the'lieat of thie day be has to stay in dours and avoid the sun,to preven t Des- up, not in his own injuries, but in the death ‘of his baby boy and the loss ofa limb inflicted upon his helpmate.