By P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slihgs. —HANNA and McKINLEY certainly ap- pear to be on the toboggan. . —ARCHIBALD MURRAY HOWE sounds a little like Massachusetts, doesn’t it. —And now they say that the Governor gave CHAMBERS and his crowd a gold brick. —Do you honestly think that the for- mer Governor will be for Judge LOVE in -1904 2? —The Republicans of the county had a great Love-feast on Monday. The prinei- pal viand-spread ont was LOVE and the In- surgents gobbled the defunct QUAYite clear up. —With THOMPSON and ALLISON as pep- tonoids the HASTINGS and QUAY people in Centre county were both able to eat enough crow on Monday to get together and unite on a ticket. —When Bellefonte adopts a regulation curb for streets and makes them high in the middle, so as to give proper drainage at all times, the town will begin to look like something nearer a metropolitan place. —They say that when Mr. CHAMBERS discovered that JOHN THOMPSON had de- serted the QUAY outfit and had pledged himself to vote against the old man, if elected, he was hit harder than he would have been had that burglar’s bullet struck him a few nights ago. —Lock Haven is to have a baby show on October 6th and we wouldn’t be a bit sur- prised if former Governor HASTINGS would enter a few of the little QUAYites he has weaned from their old dad recently. If big babies would take the prize he ought to win a whole tray of silver cups. —The third party convention in New York did not turn out to be nearly as ex- citing as it was hoped to be. There were only forty-three delegatee present and not enough enthusiasm at any time to start a howl. They nominated DONALDSON CAF- FREY, of Louisiana, for President, and ARCHIBALD MURRAY HOWE, of Massa- chusetts, for Vice President. —I1l-mannered Republicans hissed Sen- ator WELLINGTON during his speech at Cumberland, Md., on Tuesday night, but hissing didn’t frighten the former Republi- can leader who is now for BRYAN, nor will it frighten the thousands of votes he con- trols in that State away from the polls on election day. Maryland will certainly be Democratic this fall. —The President hardly knows where he is at in the Chinese situation. He would like to side with England, but rumblings of discontent at home have frightened him so. that he is now thinking of’ withdrawing from China when Russia does. If these ominous rumblings were only continued until our soldiers are actually withdrawn from that land what a blessing it would be. —San DIEHL swears he won’t stand for no such deals as the leaders made here on Monday and we don’t blame him. Why they dealt SAM clear out of his job of run- ning for the Legislature and never even asked his permission. He will find plenty of company in his kick against the idea of a few fellows in Bellefonte making mon- keys out of old stalwart Republicans all over the county. —The former Governor has at last un- loaded the gold brick QUAY gave him a few years ago and the QUAY people, them- selves, were the ‘‘gillies’”” who bought it. They say that ToMMY MITCHELL and JNO. C. MILLER mauipulated the deal and the way they fixed Mr. CHAMBERS’ clock gave him a jolt that made him think of the con- vention last spring, when JoHN C. sat down on everything in sight and ToMMY juggled with the roll call until the QUAY- ites were beaten clear out. —The recurrence of frightful catastro- phes on the Reading railroad should be of sufficient importance to bring the matter of block signals before the next Legisla- ture. All systems, over which traffic is as heavy as it is on the main lines of the Reading, should be equipped with a, signal system that would leave no doubt in the minds of enginemen as to what they are to do in an emergency such as was that at Hatfield last Sunday morning in Wijeh thirteen people lost their lives. —The HASTINGS and Love people made a deal on Monday and for a few, moments the latter crowd were about as happy as a ‘gang of boys with new sleds. The result of the deal has turned out to be that the former Governor gets his Mr. ALLISON and his Mr. THOMPSON on the ticket for Legis- lature and gets his Mr. REEDER re-elected county chairman all without having to epend the from $5,000 to $8,000 which the QUAY people have made him do to accom- plish the same’ thing in the past. Judge Love and CHAMBERS got—Well, now |' they would really like to have some one tell them just what they did get. . - —— Burgess PRUNER, “of Tyrone, has signed the bill passed by council for ‘the purchase of the works of "the. Tyrone Gas and Water Co. and the people of that’ place will vote on the question next November. Now if the proposition was to purchase the Tyrone brewery we might be able to give you a tip on how to bet on the re- sult. But when they wreck milk wagons on the streets up there and the highest of- ficial of the place tumbles into ‘‘Dry-run’’ we must confess ignorance as to what they will do on the water question. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 45 The Empty Dinner Pail. There is a kettle dram rattle about the “fall dinner pail”’ out at Anderson, Ind., that threatens all kinds of disappointments to Republican hopes. In fact there is a hollowness of sound about them that must prove an eye opener to workingmen, well as a reminder to Mr. HANNA that the prosperity of trusts and the welfare of labor do not travel the same road nor can they be yoked together. The “‘full dinner pail’’ has been a great claim for the Republicans in that State, up to this time. In fact it has been about the only argument that has been heard, why McKINLEY and imperialism and trusts should succeed. It was just as empty of reality as was many a dinner pail of sub- stantial food but, all the same, it was used, and used for all that was in it. It is not talked so much about the last few days, however. The nail trust has giv- en an illustration of how quickly it can empty the dinner pails of workingmen, and how little compunction of conscience it has in doing it when its own interests can be benefited by such action. Last week the American rod and nail mill at Anderson was employing 980 work- ing men. To-day it has but five names up- on its pay rolls. Without a moment’s no- tice to its employees it shut down its works, on Saturday night last, to remain shut down for all time. It is not to be opened again, and its 975 laborers can tramp the country until they find work elsewhere. There was no necessity for the olose-down, only that which demands greater profits for the trusts. Nails and rods are both bringing good prices and the demand is sufficient to keep all the works of the trust ronning full time and paying fair dividends. But a scarcity in the mark- et, will be an excuse for higher prices and greater profits, and this is what the trust is after. To accomplish this the Anderson works are to be abandoned. There are to-day and there will be to- morrow, and the next day, and for weeks and months to come, empty dinner pails by the hundred about Anderson, while the profits of the trusts are daily increasing and accumulating. Out of these profits will come munificent contributions to Mr. HANNA'S campaign fund, which “will be used to convince workingn:en of the great ‘‘prosperity that Mr. McKINLEY and the trusts’ have brought to them. Part of their profits will be the wages heretofore paid to working men at Ander- son. Out of these unpaid wages Mr. HAN- NA will now get a full share, with which to print campaign documents telling how McKINLEY and imperialism and trusts help the workingman and insure him a ‘full dinner pail.” He may fool some, but he won't fool 975 workingmen at- Anderson, whose ‘‘empty pails’’ are proofs not only of what Repub- lican trusts are but of what they will do to satisfy their greed. ——As long as the Republicans mind their Ps and Qs there ought to be no trouble about PLATT and QUAY continu- ing to be bosses. ~——The Republican papers are working hard to get a little consolation and courage out of the resultin Vermont. They figure up the returns in every way, and then they figure them over again, and are com- pelled to admit that their majority this year, while being up to the average that Vermont has shown at its state elections since 1890, isalmost one third less than | that of 1896. If they will figure on a while they will probably discover that a like decrease of the Republican vote, when compared with the election of 1896, in the States of Maryland, West Virginia, Ken- tucky and Indiana, will give all these States to the Democracy, and make certain the election of BRYAN. Of course thete is but small comfort to Republicans in fignr- ing on such a basis. but if Vermont is to be taken as pointing the. way, the presi- dential election is going, he is a mullet head of a mathematician who wouldnt warn Mr. McKINLEY. that the chances are against him, ‘and: that the political wind: is blowing from anotber direction. ete ——Down in Tancastor county, wherean eight thousand majority for the Republi- can ticket is always expected, a real race war has broken out about the right of col- ored children to attend the public schools. The school boards there are all in the hands of the Republicans and sortie time ago they concluded that their children were some- what better than the little darkeys, and separate schools were provided for the lat- ter. This don’t seem’to suit the colored element and they insist on attending the same schools at which the white children are taught. How the ‘matter will termi- nate of course no one knows, but by the time it is settled the darkeys down there ‘ought to understand that abou’ the only thing the Republicans think they are fit for, or have a right to do, is to vote the Republican ticket. BELLEFONTE, PA., SEP. 7, 1900. A Queer City. Philadelphia isa queer city, and is filied with queer people. At least conditions and actions say it is. It is but a month or so since it coughed up $100,000 to secure the nominating con- as | vention of the party of imperialism, tariff and trusts. It is but a few days since it pledged to Mr. HANNA, $600,000 to his campaign cor- ruption fund—$700,000 in all—and this in addition to the sums that will be required for its repeaters, its ballot box-stuffers, its bribers and false counters at its local elec- tions. Surely it is a city of money, and the profits of trusts must be enormous that its beneficiaries can furnish for the purpose of debaunching elections and corrupting voters, the sums they are willing to be held up for. Appearances and conditions do not in- dicate this however. To the public view Philadelphia is but a plain, staid, Quaker city. A city without means, to open its natural high-ways, improve its facilities for business or the disposition to give itself even a passable local government. For years it has been begging of the State, and annually it importunes Con- gress to furnish it means, to clean the mud out of the Delaware river that other than third class vessels can land their cargoes on its rotten and contracted wharves. Itis unable to raise a cent of money to dredge and make navigable this one natural ous- let to the trade of the world, but it has $700,000 to spend in a single year for par- tisan purposes and the corruption of elec- tions. ] For months its newspapers have been agitating and urging the establishment ‘of a line of vessels to connect it with the southern sea-port cities, and thus secure trade and afford its own people the facili- ties for doing business that residents of every other city within reach of the sea- coast have long enjoyed, but without avail. Philadelphia business men have no money for such purpose, but they have $600,000 to establish imperialism, protect trusts, and promote Mr. HANNA’s efforts to de- bauch the voters of the country. It is a city filled with people who seem satisfied to drink and bathe in water that is unfit for a healthy hog-wallow; who are willing to pay for city gas that a tal- low dip out-does in brilliancy; who allow their wharves to rot and fall into the river; who beg of the State yearly for public alms to provide it with hospitals, asylums, and poor-houses, and whose teachers are com- pelied to go without pay unless private purses are opened to relieve their wants. To rid itself of such draw-backs and dis- graces it has no money, but it has $600,- 000 to speud on a single election, and it takes its moneyed representatives but two hours to make up their minds to furnish that amount. Surely it is a queer city, and filled with queer people, that will drink the nastiness that comes from the sewerage of Reading and other cities along the Schuylkill, for want of money to supply themselves with pure water, and who raise $600,000 in two hours to bribe voters and election officers to secure Republican success. Surely it is a queer city, that cannot maintain its own asylums or provide for its own hospitals, that allows its business to go to decay and begs of outside people to make its public improvements, while it furnishes means without stint to debauch elections, and prolong the reign of trusts. It is not to be wondered at that in such a city, ‘burglaries and high-way robberies are among its most frequently committed crimes; that abhorrent vices flaunt them- selves in the most insolent manner on its busiest streets; that the doors of its broth- els are allowed to stand wide open; that speak-easies are everywhere; that policy gambling is entrenched in adjoining rooms to its city courts;’’ that its elections are controlled by the boss and the ballot box- stuffers ; its offices filled with creatures who are under obligations to and protect its criminal classes, and that in all things, officially, publicly and politically, its rot- tenness is rank and its reputation blasted. Yes, it. is a queer city, and it will have the brass to ask Democratic Members in the next Congress, and Democratic Legisla- tors in the next Legislature, to vote it appropriations from the public treasury to provide it with that which the $700,000, given within the past three months for partisan purposes should have been devot- ed to. . ———It is astonishing how exceedingly bard some peopie dre to please. Here are the Republicans _ insisting, until they are red in the face, that imperialism and mili- tarism are not issues in this campaign, and then when BRYAN gets up before the labor people at Chicago, and refers to these two subjects, they give him bally-ho for drag- ging in political questions when making a speech to workingmen. Really there are folks whom nothing will satisfy. ——How long will’ it be until those sweet harmony bells will be out of tune | again ? The Surrender 57 the Quay Leaders. Judge T.OVE has surrendered; Governor HASTINGS has quit boasting of how he would bury others, politically, and here- after, on the surface at least among the would-be leaders, there is to be political peace within the county, in the party to which these men belong. Why and how this was brought about is an open secret. LOVE wants to be re- elected Judge to succeed himself. HAsT- INGS is itching to be presented by his party at home for the United States Senatorship. They have simply come to an agreement to take care of themselves. LOVE now is to allow HASTINGS to name who he desires to be candidates for the Legislature and to have REEDER continue at the head of the organization without a contest. In return HAsTiNGs and his crowd are to support Love for renomination to the judgeship four years hence. The further understand- ing is, and it is said that a written pledge to that extent has been exacted from the two men who are to be put forward as candidates for the Legislature, that their votes and support is to be given the ex- Governor for United States Senator, and that under any and all circumstances they are to act and do as is desired and demand- ed by him. To close the eyes of the Quay Republi- cans JNO. K. THOMPSON, of Philipsburg, who has been one of them, is to be made one of the candidates for the Legislature. THOMPSON is to assure those he has here- tofore worked with that no anti-QuAy pledge has been asked or demanded of him. This, if reports are true, is literally correct. He is not pledged against QUAY, hut he is pledged, tightly as man can be, to HAST- INGS, and for whatever he demands. WIL- LIAM ALLISON, of Gregg, who is known as an avowed anti-QUAYite, is booked as the other nominee. . How much of peace, this sell-out of Judge LovE and through which he hopes to smooth his own way hereafter, will se- core to the contending factions, only time will tell. ‘There are scores of substantial and representative Republicans within the county who will revolt at the idea of handing their party over, body and breech- es, to those who, after receiving the honors and-emoluments of its offices, have not hes- ‘tated to traduce its leaders or to combine to defeat the will of its majority. There are scores of others who have personal as well as political reasons for refusing to join in a movement intended only to grat- ify the ambition and aid the aspirations of ex-Governor HASTINGS. There are scores more who have too much independence to allow themselves and their political efforts to Le traded off as though they were mules. And there are the half hundred or over of office holders, whose places have been given them through the efforts and kindness of Senator QUAY, and, in whom it would be the hasest ingratitude should they now consent to a deal that has for its purpose the glorification of the man whose only political efforts since he quit drawing an official salary, has been to demoralize his party and to disgrace and defeat its recognized leader. ~ What these will do none but them- selves know. They have been sold with- out consultation and the compensation they are to have is the promise of support for Judge LOVE for renomination four years hence, and the glory of helping to give political standing to one who has boasted of his intent and ability to Relea and dishonor them. Possibly these may be sufficient induce- ments to have them desert those who have stood by them and their party—to forget their manhood and political consistency; to rally to the support of the ex-Governor for United States Senator, and to say to Senator QUAY ‘‘we want nor will have none of you or yours.” Possibly they are not, we can only wait and see. For the present all is peace and HASTINGS i is its God-father. ——Our Republican friends up in the Blair-Cambria congressional distriot are starting ont in a most promising way for the good of the country. | They began with a fight in each county of the district about who should have the conferees, and they : are now fighting about who the conferees are, and by the time they get this settled and claw each other to pieces in a fight over ‘who the nominee is to be, there should be a pretty good chance for the decent people of the district to get together and wallop the conceit out of the whole pack of them. 1t is'a strong Republican district and there are many good men living within it, but why they should get into a fight over a candidate with ‘no more ability than THROPP has, ora renegade Democrat like REYNOLDS is, is a mystery to us. Neither ‘have any claims upon their party and less upon the people, and the proper disposi- | ; tion of their pretensions and ambitions would be to lick the one at the convention and the other at the election. This would be both creditable to the good sense of the voters of the district and beneficial to the | welfare of the country. NO. 385. Judas Would Have Revolted at Such a Job. From present indications the contest among the Republicans of the county, this year, will not be to secure or to prevent the election of Representatives to Harris- burg who would vote for the return of Senator QUAY to the United States Senate, but to elect members who will support Mr. QUAY’S enemy, ex-Governor HASTINGS, for that position. Its a big turn round for some men to make—it may be a very bit- ter pill for others to swallow—to change from QUAY to HASTINGS, as candidates for United States Senate, but that is what and that is all the harmony trick, that has just been played here, means and it is all the QUAY people can expect to get out of it. There is a great, broad-smile on the face of every anti-QuAvyite about town, and the honest ones among them admit that if ever a gold brick was given any set of men, it was the one the QUAY men have gotten in this deal. They may be satisfied with it, but as one of them remarked, in our hear- ing on Wednesday, ‘‘its a pretty tough prop- osition to ask us to betray and desert Senator QUAY but when it goes farther and requires us to support his bitterest enemy and maligner it looks like a job that even Jupas would have revolted at.” The Whole Thing. From the Denver News. Who causes all the crops io grow ? cKinley. Who makes the seasons come and go ? McKinley. Who shapes the current of events? Who fepulates the elements? Who takes the place of Providence ? McKinley. Who makes it Li when it is dry? MeKinl o>. Who shapes demand, also supply ? McKinle Who caused the Indian famine, which Raised corn and wheat to such a pitch It made the farmers all get rich ? McKinley. Who gives He people industry ? Who makes the de prosperity ? McKinley. Who placed the gold down in the ground And then got out and scratched around Till Cripple Creek and Nome were found ? McKinley. Who sailed into Manila Bay ?. . McKinley. Who sunk Cervera’s fleet one day ? McKinley. Who fought against the war; then came At a late hour nto the game, And took the glory for the same? Ta cKinley. a 3 Who is the source of every good ? Who wants that fully understood ? McKinley. If any benefit befall Somewhere upon this mundane ball Who is the creature sleek and small That has the monumental gall To claim the credit for it all ? McKinley. Going to Russia for Lessons on Peace. From the N. Y. World. It seems certain that the Czar of Russia intends to leave China as soon as his errand of relief is accomplished. He thus gives another evidence that he is the most humane and civilized ruler in the world. He is for peace and justice. He is against bloodshed. He was sincere in inviting the world to disarm. It is a great pity that our own President is behind the absolute Czar. Until Mr. McKinley became President this govern- ment was the exemplar and promoter of peace and arbitration. Now the Czar and not the President is the humane ruler. If he leaves Peking with his troops he will do what Mr. McKinley should have prom- ised to do before the looting of Tien Tsin and the march on Peking began. It is strange that the lesson of peace and justice shonld be taught by the hereditary head of the largest army to the elected head of almost the smallest. What It Means. From the New Orleans Times-Democrat. ‘The doctrine laid down by Republican leaders cannot be misunderstood. It is to build a ‘powerful navy, able to compete with the strongest nation of the world; to launch out upon the seas; tocross the ocean and plant our flags in Asia or wherever else we can open a way for trade; to con- quer, to buy, to annex colonies and hold them under novel laws which shall keep them in subjection to the money interests of the mother country. That is the kind of imperialism that Mr. Bryan is opposing. It is not a delusion, but a bare, stubborn fact which the people must meet at the ballot-box in November. ; Three Colored Bishops Come Out for Bryan. Bishop Turner Arranges te Take the Stump—MeKin- ley’s Treatment of the Race. CHICAGO, Aug. 31.—Bishop Henny M. Turner, of the African M. E. church, and Bishops Derricks and Grand, of the same church, will to-morrow night make a formal - announcement of their change from McKinley to Bryan. Not content with deeiding to vote for Bryan, Bishop Turner, expressed a desire to take the stump, and he has made ar- rangements with the Democratic ' National committee to speak in Kansas, Minnesota, Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia and Illinois. . In the last four States the African M. E. church has centred a large part of its total membership of 500, 000 communicants. “I shall give my reasons to-morrow night,” said Bishop Turner. ‘‘The Me- Kinley administration’ has completely ignored ‘colored men. No commissions ‘were given the brave colored soldiers of the Ninth and Tenth cavalry, who saved the Rough Riders at San Juan, and none to the fine colored soldiers of the Twenty- fourth and Twenty-fifth infantry. No colored man-has been officially recognized in any way.” Spawls from the Keystone. —Altoona has seven cases of typhoid fever. —A Fish and Game Protective Association of Berks county will be formed at Reading next Friday. —Lockjaw, resulting from having all his toes cut off on the railroad, caused the death of Hugh Bradley, a brakeman, of Phoenix- ville. —An incendiary fire Sunday morning de= stroyed the new barn, crops and ten pigs of John Miller, near Anderson station, Mifflin county. —For embezzlement Banker Samuel Haz- lett, of Washington, was Tuesday sen- tenced to 18 months in the Western peniten~ tiary, costs of prosecution and a fine of $778,- 18. —The receipts of the Ninth Internal Reve- nue District for August were $329,791.99 of which $238,362.67 was from cigars alone. The receipts from cigars were the largest the dis- trict ever produced in a single month. —*Dolly’’ Black, one of the oldest resi- dents of Lancaster, died on the anniversary of her birth at the age of 96 years. She had a mania for attending funerals, and was a conspicuous figure for years at obsequies in that community. —The overcrowded condition of the Dan- ville hospital for the insane was further re- lieved by the removal of 75 patients to the Luzerne county hospital in a special car. This makes about two hundred who have been transferred within a few weeks. —A sixteen foot vein of fine quality an- thracite coal has been discovered on the farm of Daniel Lenhart, in Centre township, Berks county. The length of the vein is not known, but is supposed to extend to the mountain, a considerable distance away. —The new furnace of the Dunbar Furnace Company was put in blast on Saturday. It will have a production of over 300 tons a day. Notices were posted by the management of the company informing all employes that their wages would be reduced 5 per cent. —Mrs. Ida Eckenroth, of Reading, insists that her 18-month-old son, Elmer,” has been bewitched. The mother declares that the spell was placed upon her baby by someone known fo her who lives in the neighborhood and who entertains a grudge against her husband. —Susquehanna district, Knights of the Golden Eagle, held their annnal meeting at Milton, bringing about 500 visitors to town. The chief feature of the day was the parade, which formed at 1.30 p. m. and disbanded about 4 o'clock, Major W. H. Straub was chief marshal. —One of the strongest institutions of Cound- ersport is a unique matrimonial organization known as the Uxor X Club of young men. Its eleven members are pledged to marry within two years or pay a forfeit of $200. ien this object has been accomplished the Tor X will cease to exist, —The 14th ancual reunion of the old Bucktail Regiment will be held at Ridgway the 13th, 14th, and 15th of September. A great reception will be tendered the veterans and the few that are left of their noted regi- ment are anticipating one of the most enjoy- able reunions their association has held. —B. W. Quigg, one of the hest known resi~ dents of Johnston, died at the Memorial hos- ‘pital Monday night of uraemic poisoning, aged 46. His wife returned from a Pittsburg hospital Saturday night, and he had arrang- ed a big reception. At midnight she discov- ered him unconscious, in which condition he remained until death came. —The strike at the Jermyn mines, near Pittston, has resumed serious proportions. The wives of the strikers are on duty as pickets about the mines and hereafter they will take an active part in the fight against the operators. The trouble began about two months ago, and about two weeks ago the officials of the company succeeded in resum- ing work with the aid of non-union men. The situation is most alarming, and an out- break is hourly feared. —The Altoona glass plant, one of the inde- pendent factories, employing 20 blowers, and which was expected to start up on September 1st, has not yet begun the manufacture of window glass for this fire. The management is waiting on the adjustment of the wage dif- ficulty between the flatteners and cutters and the combine management before they open their plant. The fires in the plant have been banked and nothing more will be done until a settlement is reached. —George W. Youngson, census supervisor for Westmoreland county, has gladdened hearts of prospective office holder and politi- cians by announcing that the county’s popu- lation is beyond the 150,000 mark. The ad- dition of an Orphan’s Court Judge, the crea- tion of the office of County Controllor and Register of Wills and the abolishment of the office of County Auditor depended upon the population passing that point. In addition the fee system of paying county officials will be abolished. | —At a recent meeting of the stock holders of the Juniata Valley Campmeeting associa- tion K. M. King was elected president, B. E. Morrison, secretary; W. B. Moore, of Harris- burg, treasurer, and J. K. Rhodes, of Lewis- town; B. E. Morrison, of Newton Hamilton; Charles Stratford, of Mount Union; K.M. King, of Huntingdon, John Lowther, of Bellwood, and John Hoover, of Altoona, di- rectors. It isrumored that next year the distasteful admission fee and purchasing re- strictibns will be removed and that the sum- mer resort feature will be made the princi- pal attraction, with the campmeeting a sec- ondary consideration, but nothing official has been given out. —The contractors for the Rockville bridge six miles west of Harrisburg, are hustling to get the work on the great stone viaduct so far completed that the narrow gauge railroad which has been built alongside the pier foundations can be removed before the high water season begins. Already the wooden arch centres are all up on the Maryland side of the river, except one, which the contract- ors are working on at present. On the Rock- ville side of the river four of the centres are in place. As soon as the centres are in posi- tion, the work of laying the cut stone will be ‘commenced. As’ the arches are completed the work will be done from the bridge in- stead of from the narrow gauge railroad as at vresent. The Susquehanna river at Rock- ville, at present, presentsa very busy appear- ance. CR ANS dot
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers