BY P. GRAY MEEK. ————————————————————— = Ink Slings. __"Phe hustling they held at Axe Mann this week : Proved & regular Donny-brook fair, For the Irish and Dutch punched both eyes : and “beak” Of nearly every old hustler there. Of course there were some who took to the k : x Th AND FEDERAL UNIONCC STATE RIGHTS In the cold, dreary hours of the night, , But they were the ones «who weren't no good” When it came to a real Jrish fight. : —Présidens McKINLEY says the war. in the Philippines ended last spring, but he “| asks for an army of 60,000 men to make she Filipinos. believe it. : 2 © __Bellefonte doesn’t have to bear the re- sponsibility of having caused Centre coun- ty’s shrinkage in sion during the * last ten years for while the total in the county fell off 375 Bellefonte gained 270. —_Fast through trains are contemplated, whereby travelers will be able fo go to’ sleep in Pittsburg and waken up in Phila- delphia, but a feature ‘of the service that is likely to canse real trouble is the gnaran- . tee that the traveler will get awake in Philadelphia. ——And pow is the winter of our discontent, Made into a season both long and drear, Because in-Congress most all Members seem bent, :; Fo keep a war tax on tobacco and beer. But (be Beginning. islation.” was enacted while we were | imperils. —t'President MoKISLEY'S message is Jong because he has mueh to say,’ observes an exchange. And it is in the natural order of things that it shonld be lor Any President who has promised so much and done so little must necessarily resort to verbosity in order to bide his short comings. : at the same old stand. Last Wednesday the British garrison at Dewetsdorp, 400 strong; surrendered to a force of Boers and now the English papers are talking as it | quake _ the war had only begun. ‘We might be able to ‘have a good laugh on JoHN BULL “were it not for a little trouble. that Ungle ‘ SAM has gotten, himself into over in the _ Philippines. ~The Quarter Master General of the: ; Lo Michigan National Guard, who plead guilty eases] of is Seria A to the charge of complicity in, the state | 3 military clothing frauds, got ten yearsas. bard labor in the penitentiary. Peer WRITE, be had far ‘better been in cahoots other people have. with EAGAN in the embalmed beef frauds. He would have profited more and suffered less for his shortoomings. There seems to be a vast difference between Lansing, Mich.; and Washington justice. : _ Standard Oir's’still in the sky And @o'ane knows when it will cease Sogn ehips ita souritg up so high Because its stock, us smooth as’grease. nr “capital out of the fact that Representative | shat dan WiLLiaM T. MARSHALL, of Allegheny, ‘who is a candidate for Speaker of the next | living under is. | Chinamen are ours, justas 3 he 618 fo | ol hin bill is more than we are able to under stand. Especially when one. of pins of ‘the Insurgents was the the oil outpnt of the State. | this government. —-—It is one of the strange things that when a particularly dirty mess is turned up in New York, a Republican is always found at the bottom of it.. When the ice | trust of that city was exposed, all its offi- cials were found to be Republicans. Now that they are uncoyering the vice and im- morality that bas disgraced its manage- ment, Republican captains of police are being tarned up as the fellows who have been delinquent in doing their duty. buckwheat cake eaters of the country are | wanted. being flim flammed by the millers. The | New Era claims that the buckwheat cake of today is not what it was forty years ago. and the Press seeks a proof by stating that * while there are from 10,000,000 to 12,000,- ee. ) Yes, We Have Been Wrong. . in the country the flour ought to be our army. PE delphi, but up this way the only notable difference we find in the buckwheat. cake of today and the dyspepsia generator of | forty years ago is the abéenee of such | kinds of merchandise, wholesale attacks of buckwheat ith. And | as were necessary for i the millers have been responsible | Last week a 6 tracting the soratcbies from the flour wo say: | dition of Praise them ! _Tustead of hissing the pure | pol food commissioners onto them. it | ~The first measure presented in Con-. gress when it re-convened on Monday last © Representatives in Congress * under the | pp; eleventh census.” The proposed act pro-. lippines. Representatives from 357 to 365. Of this ‘population. This, the 28th district, as at * present constituted ‘has a population of 201,733, and is probably closer to the pro- | posed ratio than any district in the State. Its people do not need to worry about the passage of the bill presented or bother over re-apportionments under it. They have about all the representatives they can get in Congress and are probably better - satis- in beer saloon when he sees one... they are; than they would be under any | poor trade in the Philippines. pew arrangement of counties that is like- : col S——— ly to be made. -—fubscribe for the WATCEMAN. A Washington dispatch to the daily papers of Monday, complain that ‘despite the stringent exclusion laws and treaty stipulations, Chinese laborers are coming into the United States in as great numbers as before the enactment of prohibitive leg- ; 1 8 0! g P | American commerce is to be benefited | the greater part being given up to the ; “| Chinese question. If we include the space given to she Philippines and other acquisi- ‘ to four and one: half And why shouldn’t they? Legislation prohibiting the immigration of Chinese content with what we had, and made some pretense of protecting our own laboring men against the cheap labor of other countries. Im- perialism ‘has changed conditions, and American labor will hereafter be compelled to take its chances along with every other : interest and right that this new doctrine We are grasping for whatever we can ‘get outside. When we get it we must ac cept in good faith what our greed brings. 16 Bas brought us these Chinese and there is no way of stopping them. In the Hawaii- ‘an islands; that are now past of this conn- try and have their representative in the Congress of the United States, there are over 30,000 Chinese laborers, every one of whom has the same right to come to Ameri- ca and crowd an American workingman 1 out of his place, that a merchant, a lawyer — The Boers ‘seem to be doing business | or any other resident of those islands bas. ; Guam, anotheref our recent possessions wid way between the Hawaiian and Philip pine islands, aud a spot of sun-dried earth- | As it works in China, so it must workin shaken land, sesves a3 a preparing place for Chinese immigeation. Its resi- ‘dents have the right of entey into this conn- try. Any Chinaman ean begeile a resident there in six weeks. This gives him laud- ing rights among our own people, and who can prevent him? Guam is now a part and greedy government, alghongh they ‘have been there but a few weeks, have all ‘the rights of entry into this'country - hat | Then we are fighting for the Philippines : as full of Chinese as a fall | corn field is of rag-weed—and they become prt of one Possessions as our ATmY Suc- ceeds.and onv flag is carried forward. On these islands there are estimated to be 1,- | 500,000 Chinese and Chinese mestizos-half- breeds. For these and a war with the Fili- | : pinos we paid Spain $20,000,000. These oh ‘as the prexent_thosé belonging to “this | government, coming tot and earning a So thatin addition tothe’ House, voted for the obnoxious pipe line 30,000 Hawaiian Chinamenand to the facil- ities furnished by Guam as a smuggler’s the king | nest, there area million and a half more Governor | Chinamen in the’ Philippines whom we ‘who signed the obnoxious bill and made it | bave opened our doors too, by making the possible for the great monopoly to control | country of their adoption a possession of ‘Under the circomstance is it any wonder that they are pouring into this country? Laboring men, who find their wages go- ing down on account of the surplus of labor ; now in the country, may growl and whine ‘had made for the good of all. about cheaper labor coming, and prospects : of competing with the cheapest labor that | is known as the face of the earth—the Chinese--bnt they have po reason to. They voted for this-condition of affairs, in voting for the policies that MARK HANNA ‘and those whose interest it is to have cheap —The Lancaster New Era and the Phila- labor, and they are beginning to get, al- delphia Press are of the cpinion that the | ready, what they said by their ballots they We take itall back—ackuowledge the corn—and frankly concede that our com- ,- | meree is expanding in the Philippines; 000 bushels of buckwheat gown annually | éven in the face of she war we are waging mr oeht. to be sil | agaios the people of theo lands. Since right, unless the miller adniterates it. We the government liad wo mere men to ship don’t know how it isin Lancaster or Phila- to Maniln, she vessels that have been sent ag oi to return ladened with onr dead, ‘wounded and fever stricken soldiers nsual- ly left their American ports empty of all ‘exeept such supplies ange occurred in this oon” alanced wheo! in affairs. Commercialism scored a governor badly. © © ‘a western ‘paper announces the 6 shat thie 1ast vessel to leave San Fran- ; licans R | isco harbor for Manila “carried a cargo of 427,431 voters who are not of that political 50,000 barrels of American beer—the. big: : b | gest and most valuable ship load of Ameri: ‘ ‘was'a bill “making an apportionment of | ‘m chandise that ever started for the Mow proud the Jingo \ ; statesmen, who are crying fora continua- vides for an increase in the number of sion of ‘the war, in the interest of commer- . aves his | gial expanion, will be, over this fact ! How , inerense two will come to P ennsylvania, | gated the Christian Temperance people will giviog the State hereafter 32 members in | gee] when: they realize that. their war, to Congress, or one for every 196,941 of it8 | gp 00d christian civilization,is but opening : roads for the beer wagon ! How thankful| four Representatives, or one for every 106,- ee of nat toe prapemfona [Jt Wedonrdh the. repieientation the rto civilize the heathen, has been an- : red to the extent that he alteady knows Surely there is hope ahead, and the pul- pit and the business house—the church Le and commercialism—should continue th fied, and their interests better cared for a8 | qo a for the spread of christianity and the ei | BELLEFONTE, PA., DEC. 7. 1500. Closing the «Open Door” and Destroying | - . The President’s Message. ¢ 3 Business. SRILA : From the Pittsburg Post. 4 Mr. McKINLEY may talk about the ne- | cessity of an ‘‘open door” to Chinese trade until he grows weary in ‘what: he believes. to be well-doing, but he will have to change present conditions amazingly if| voted to our relations with foreign powers, press copies sent out from Washington,and by it. During Ogtober, 1899, with the door to China practically closed against us, our exports to that country amounted to $1,324,314 while in October, 1900, with the “open door’ in: our favor eur exports amounted to but $579,000. For the last ten months of the current year our trade with that country has fallen off $2,196,- 144. tions, ‘am columns, we have a total of thirteen and ‘one half columns required to discuss in the ! t's way concerns outside the Unit- ed States, leaving four and one half in close relation to our seventy six millions of population. This is significant of the ‘extent B10 witiel the ited States bas be- “| come t we call po d hi This fact goes far to prove the illusion; ay Diver nd how of the belief, that * ‘trade follows the flag.” These never was a time when our flag was #8 much in evidence in China as during the past ten months. Over its fortifiea- tions, its rivers, its public thoroughfares, | it is advised, should be increa its official buildings, its Joss houses and its opium dives, it floated in all its glory, and trade scems to have shriveled wherever it went. & But the Jingo will say, “‘it was because of the war.” So it was, and this fact and these figares only go to prove that you |the President takes decisive ground, is in cannot extend commerce at the point of the his suppor oF ge ship 8 heidy iid he re- £ a a aL S m ‘a bayonet, ' vor Secute the good will and messages, comm “uimediate Da trade of a people by the sword and fire ahd | There have been signs of Republican dis- the cruelties of war. : “4+ | sent from this subsidy scheme, running in- to hundreds of millions of dollars, and the presidential hoost for it will be likely to force Mark Hanna's job through Congress. portant home affairs. 7 al Home affairs are treated briefly and wit! ‘a few vague surface recom ons. decision of the Isthmian Canal goes force of 15,000. On the trost question the | President ‘quotes from a former message and “urges that *‘the bad trusts” within Federal jurisdiction be restrained. It was predicted that he was preparing an anti- trast blast, but this amounts to nothing. The only home question, in fact, om which the Philippines, only ten times more to our | disadvantage proportionately. ‘We hadan | excuse for our actions that has stopped’ much of our trade with China. | We have’ none, whatever, for the miserable, costly and cruel purposes we are attempting to’ carry ous in the Philippines. "1 largement of the army. If the Chinaman bates us to the extent With’ reference to the Philippines, the « to dei Pe i= message is much less explicit than Mr. Me- thas he Fe Sel Wiel as because we, Kinley's letter of acceptance. It gives no sent our flag and our soldiers into ‘his, information beyond a vague statement that conntry to protect our own people who profess has been made. It repeats at were there, what must be. the sentiment length the instructions given to the civil Tes : 3. | commissioners and expresses a hope that of the, Filipino, whose home .we are deso- ¢ivil government may sometime be estab- lating, whose people we are murdering, | Jished, without stating the ground on who cities and towns we are destroying and | which the lope is based. whose country we are laying waste, to- wards us? Can any sane man believe that we are building up our trade with that country by the cruelties and desolations’of From the Philadelphia Times. % # # # # Those who look to it for a clear and incisive definition of policy will be disappointed, except as concerns the en- out in the Pailippines and prefers to let things drift. Drifting is the policy svg- gested also for Porto Rico and for Cuba. One positive recommendation the wmes- war ? Phe mse does contain. i spite of the promise AED nag ee ne of eivil government for the Filipinos, who And vet commeicialism ! says it mE: are ominously called the *‘wards of the na- ge on. : WE 1 conc 8 Lion,” the President says we must keep ng them an army of from 45,000 to 60,- 000 wibhout counting $He WAtive soldiers it is hoped to enlist. "Troops are required also in Ceba and Porto Rico and the coast garrisons should employ 26,000 men. It is evident, therefore, that we need an army of at least, 60,000, which “‘the President should have authority to increase’ to 100,000. ‘This more than imperial power is to enable the government to ‘adhere to its foundation principles.” 4} Of course the President winds up with a lea for ‘‘wise economy”’ and some more pretty sentiments about liberty and peace, but the only positive features of the mes- sage are found to be a large increase of the army, at the discretion of the President, and seme new forms of expenditure to benefit private interests. “It is true, as the President says, that ‘‘the foundation of ‘onr government is liberty, its superstructure peace.”’ His military policy serves neither peace nor liberty. The one clear and un- In the death of Maj. Jonx MH. SHEIBLEY, our friend and contemporary, who for many years had been editor of the Advocate and Press, of New Bloomfield, we ‘have cause for sincere regret. Though in his 73td year be was genial in his disposi- tion, alive to the advances of civilization and a ‘man to be admired for his sturdy, ‘honest character. For nearly half a century he had been intimately connected with the newspaper, political and general business interests of Perry county and he died, leav- ing behind him the memory that his life Gone Daft. There is some fellow on the editorial staff of the Philadelphia Record who evi-- dently reeds a rest. Some over-worked, | ‘or under-fed writer, whose mind seems to have gone daft, and whose intellect must ‘message i= the call for “more troops.’’ Froth the North American. President McKinley ' devotes several thousand words of his message to the Phil- be worn or shattered to the breaking point. | pines, but it is to be regretted that he gives ue nodefinite formulation of the poli- We refer to the individual who promulgat- ed the idea, in Tuesday's issue of that | cy to be pursued in fixing thie final status paper, that the election of a Democratic of the islands. United States Senator from Pennsylvania’ world be ‘‘a gross miscarriage of the prinei- ples of representative government,” and ‘'g denial of the right of the people of this. Commonwealth to fair representation in the United States Senate.” Surely any one who prefesses to understand the princi- ple of ‘representative government’ and cares for the ‘‘rights of the people’’ who can see a wrong bo these ‘‘prineiples’’ avd “rights” in the election of a Democrat, in | the face of existing conditions, must have a worn or unbalanced whesl in his-head that needs gi iy of He declares that our forces have success- fally controlled the greater part of the is- Jands, overcome the organized forces of the insurgents and ‘‘carried order and adminis- trative regularity to all quarters.”’ = And ‘then comes the assertion that in the spring of this year *‘the effective opposition of the dissatisfied United States was virtually ended.’ ‘Bab until Con shall decide what is to be done with the Philippines, the war which was ended so successfully and benef- icently last spring is to go on, and from 000 to 60, under the flag which is the revered symbol eds a governor bay. i ot liberty, ‘enlightenriient and progress, The last election shows that’ theie are | Thetelore the Prosident ales Tor seth 691,024 Republicans in Pennsylvania and Ou ick ki por 6 » : Sy pan eal { sibility for settlement on the Philippine faith. As apportionments are at present ar- question 2p to Con 8, it | ranged. in addition to the one Sanat or these | that Congress would 80 deal with the 601,924 Republicans now boast of, they have. islands that 60,000 bayonets should not be twenty-six. members : of ‘Congress, giving’ ‘the justice, the genercsity and betevolence them one Representative in ‘thie legislative | of our intentions toward them. in department of the government for each | Forcible annexation is an ex ensive op- bas, | satan, and the pots ws of Sobre 1 On the other hand the 427,431 voters, t costs myre in dollars than the isantis ‘who do pot believe in the principles or wi Pp The business sense of the country must policies of the Republican party, have but condemn, as an unprofitable investment, the ‘857 voters that oppose Republicanism; or thin Dy forse the A i ‘and the nation’s sense of justioe is offend- | party in power has. A : _ ed by the policy which seeks to inculcate “Fair tepresentation’’ we would take {i [yeverence for the symbol of liberty : by ‘means equal representation for all. If it does not, in what does it consist? Jad if | ; it does, wherein could there be a ‘‘miséar- | pu : riage of the principles of representative | Euesplainable Heglrete goveroment,” ora “denial of the rights of | Fro the Greensburg Argus. i | the people,” in the election of aa addition Add 3 Jo known no petition hea, been al representative for those who are not of | reconsider bis decision no to be a candi- Republican faith? date for the Presidency in 1904. i Krag-Jorgensen bullets. Tr SAS =X CsI ‘The President's message is of unusual length. It makes eighteen columns in the i illtistrases the growth of our outside in- ‘terests’ that nine of these columns are de- ‘columns to matters of a domestic character foreign questions are dwarfing more im- gress without recommendation. The a ny, | pe : creased to 100,000 | men, with authority to’ raisé a Filipino | 16 is evident’ that the Pre~ident does not yet see his way | mistakable idea we get from this long: Tagals to the authority of the 50 soldiers will be needed io prevent tbe Filipinos from forgetting that they ‘are under our fostering care’ and gloss. it is to be wished | required to demonstrate to the inhabitants | POs are worth, not to speak of priceless lives. expenditure of hundreds of millions to ob- | shooting it into the hearts of a people with | ‘it’ the hind | From {he Chicago Tribune ( Rep-) Lod for authority large percentag | mothers’ hearts turned to stone over graves © { that contained their best and Jearest, torn Where the Difference Comes In. From the York Gazette. ; A comparison is made between the divi- dends paid by the Standard Oil company of this country and the J. & P. Coates company of England. A $100 share of Standard Oil stock sells for $815. This year a 50 per cent. dividend was paid. The English company also paid a 50 per cent. divided on its stock, which sells at a price even higher than the Standard Oil stock. These two companies are both referred to as monopolies and as fair objects of com- parison. We cannot see the similarity except in the fabulous size of the profits. The Standard Oil trust is a monopoly. killed practically all opposition and can fix prices at its pleasure. The Coates spool thread concern has not a monopoly, but holds the trade in an open market. There is not the slightest objection to any con- cern doing as well as it pleases and mak- } h money as it can, provided it privileges which enable it to prices. The Coates com- big profits can be made |egitimate business without a monopoly f natural product, without special railroad rates and without tariff protection—with- out. injury to the public and the artificial obstruction of trade. Tail and Dog. From the New York Jornal, | . The Congressional Record affords an interesting eommentary upon our progress from a civil to a military form of govern- ment. A few years ago the list of nomina- tions sent to the Senate at the opening gession of Congress consisted almost en - tirely of appointments as postmasters, eol- ‘lectors of customs, consuls and the like. This week the roll began with appoint- ments in the army. First there were 8 second lieutenants in the infantry arm; next 5 in the cavalry arm; and then 62 more in the infantry. These were follow- ed by the nominations of 64 graduates of the Military Academy to be second lieun- tenants. Next were 33 promotions in the staff; then 4 in the cavalry arm; then 28 in the artillery, and then 44 in the infan- try. After these came 65 promotions and 130 appointments in the volunteer army. Trailing along in the rear were 51 nomi- nations for the petty civil positions we still have to keep up, such as First Assist-. ant Postmaster-General, Indian Agents, Secretaries of embassies; Consuls and ‘United States Attorneys. Evidently the civil branch of the Gov- ernment is a very small tail to a very large military dog. : A Horse on the Horse Show, From the Franklin Spectator. That aristocratic and flunkey function, the New York horse ehow, is a grand dress affair, in which affinent swells affect stun- { ning turf appavel-and asvame to-pass judg- | ment on the points sand merits of horses: It-is set forth and assun that only the bluess blooded of equine stock can pass muster at these highly ‘fashionable exhib- its. Thereby hangs a wicked and shock- ingly funny joke' . A clever rascal named Hughes bought a street car horse for §11.- 50, fed her up with tonics of strichnia, iron and arsenious acid, docked her tail clip- ped her mane and entered her in the sad- dle horse class under the'name of ‘‘Puldeka Orphan,” She was placed in a richly up- holstered stall, attended by two grooms in gorgeous livery, and the judges, on in- Sheckian. found her eligible to compete in e - thoromghbred saddle-horse class. “Twas too good a joke to keep, and the shock that followed the discovery of the fraud was painful. Its bitterness was not molified by the suggestion that ‘‘Puldeka Orphan’’ is but an amended form of the legend, ‘‘Pulled a car often.” Neo Need for Ship Subsidies. From the Indianapolis News (Ind. Rep.) If we could start with the idea that the way to create a business is to take the shackles off and allow individual enter- ise aud capital so'find its own channels we should soon have an ocean carrying trade. But we propose still to forbid the’ buying of ships abroad, and mean still to hamper the trade by obsolete navigation laws; and yet American enterprise has tri- umphed in spite of it, and when American manufacturers are underbidding those of Great Britain on steel tails and on bridges ‘and locomotives for the use of the British army in the Sudan it will not do to say that they cannot build iron steamships as cheaply as the British. We have only to leave American enterprise alone, take from rances which am abnormally’ Ligh tariff has er and we shall beat the world: ~~ A : 5 ¥ S—————— - - & Time for Subsidies is Paut. The While commerce was earried on in wooden vessels, which eould be construct- ed more cheaply in this country than any- ‘where else in the world, Americans had a e of the carrying trade of the world, thongh no subsidies were paid. When iron replaced wood, and it was im- ible to construct iron vessels here so cheaply as in England, the American mer- chant marine decayed. But now steel and iron can be built as sheably in this country as in England, and there are many who believe that this cheapness, without the aid of subsidies, will lead to the restoration of that merchant marine, and that it is better to wait a while before embarking in the dangerous subsidy busi- ness, which France is trying with such poor results. Thanksgiving in the Philippines. From the Columbus {O) Press-Post. : We trust that nowhere in those islands from them by a cruel war. We trust that nowhere a Filipino father raised his hands to'heaven and on the ruins of his home cursed a flag that in all other parts of the world for a hundred years had invited to be free. vs only the benedictions of people struggling It has | Spawls from the Keystoue. —Officers of the Pittsburg district are try- ing to organize all the bituminous miners {into a single body. fe —Two hundred delegates attended the eleventh annual convention of the North- umberland county Christian Endeavor Union at Shamokin last week. All records for two days’ issuance of marriage licenses in the local Orphans’ Court were broken Wednesday and Thursday of last week, when the overworked clerk issued | the grand total of thirty-five. —The flow at the Pine Creek Oil and Gas Company’s Cedar Run gaser has increased until it is now a million feet a day, with mercially, this means much for Williamsport. —Hugh Brolley, aged 21 years, & well- known young man of Cresson, disappeared from his home on November 18th and since then nothing has been heard of him. His parents and friends are endeavoring to locate him. i —About five acres of valuable eoal land caved in on the Robert Gibson farm, near Blairsville, Tuesday morning. Fifteen min- ers were at work in the heading, but all es- ‘caped uninjured, losing their tools. The Isabella Coal and Coke company controlled the farm. —Mayor E. F. Giles, of Altoona, has issued strict orders to the police there to enforce the curfew law and arrest all children found on the streets after the hour of 8:30 each evening as specified by an ordinance passed by councils a number of years ago and never yet repealed. —Ata firemen’s fair in Cortland, N. Y., last week, Major Page, the famous midget weighing but 49 pounds and 31 inches high, was wedded to a stately Shamokin maiden, Miss Mary Weikel, who is six feet tall and weighs 150 pounds. It was a case of love at first sight. ; —Tuesday morning Mrs. Shrum, and two daughters, Minnie and Florence, of Latrobe; were badly burned at their home by the ex- plosion of a hanging lamp. Mrs. Shram was pulling the lamp down when 1t exploded, throwing the oil over her. and her clothes were burned off her. Minnie and Florence were badly, but not seriously burned. Sa nrday night between 9 and 10 o'clock fire destroyed the tobacco shed belonging te JohmBcheid, on what is known as the Ames property, in the southeastern section of Lock Haven. The shed with the stripping room was 112 feet long. Hanging in the shed on poles was all of the past season's erop of to- bacco raised on six acres, about 7,000 pounds, which went up in smoke in shot order. —While butchering on Friday, Amos Stevens, a farmer residing along the Brobst ‘mountain road, in Lycoming county, had a terrible experience. He entered a pen con- taining three hogs and in attempting to drive ‘one into a corner fell and was attacked by the whole three. He struck the animals with a short stick but couldn’t drive them off. Finally, his son and another man heard his eries and came to the rescue. The old gentleman is badly injured. Oneear is al- most torn off and over his face, arms and legs are gashes and bruises. —A remarkable discovery was made when the remains of Liagi Petrolo, the Italian burned to death in the wreck on the Carrol- ton branch of the Beech Creek road, were taken from the ruins. ‘Everything of the the lower part of his body. His head, arms and legs were gone, not even a semblance of them being left. Around a portion of the trank not destroyed by the merciless flames which had so quickly deprived the unfortu- nate man of his life, was a leather belt. In the belt, showing no sigus of injury or dis- figurement, was the sum of $150. —Trainsare being run over the immense cut-off above Huntingdon on the Middle division of the Pennsylvania railroad. The cut-off takes out a dangerous curve on that section of the road and gives the company a better entrance to the town of Huntingdon. It contemplates a long line of ‘straight track and is a great improvement. The road now enters Huntingdon several hundred yards to the west of the old line, which is still in use and eomes into the station by way of the yards and close to the old turn-table. The company has been at work on the changes west of Huntingdon for a number of ycars and thousands of tous of earth Has been ‘used in making the “fill’" which now cuts off the low lands formerly overflowed by the Juniata river when it became high. —Although it is a tremendous task to con- template, says the Pittsburg Post, the engi- neers of the Pennsylvania railroad have in view the straightening of the main tracks at the famous Pack Saddle curves in the deep gorge of the Conemaugh. At this place there are three bad curvesskirting a high embauk- | ment. It is almest eighty feet from the top of the rails to the water, and a wreek at such a place would be disastrous. In order te continue the four track work a great stone retaining wall will have to be constructed at: Pack Saddle, and this will be built to pro- vide for the elimination of the sharp curves. No definite time for the beginning of this big job has been set, but it is anderstood | that the prelimmary plans have been prepared by the engineers of the Pittsburg division. — Leonard Soller, an aged and respected citizen of Altoona, and his wife, Anna Mary Soller, died Friday evening, at their home in that eity, between 8 and 10 o'clock, with- in a half hour of each other both having time of their death. Mr. Soller died first. ‘He had busied himself during the day doing chores about the house and lot and was in “his usual health, except that several times ‘daring the afternoon and evening he com- plained of cramps. He ate a hearly supper and shortly afterwards complained of not feeling well ‘and retired to his room. He soon became very ill and before a doctor, | who was summoned, could arrive be passed away, death being cansed by apoplexy. Mrs. Soller was completely prostrated by the sad | event. She was assisted to her room by her | son and it soon became apparent that the | shock was too great for her to withstand and she died a half hour after her husband, hav- ing expressed a desire 10 go with him. Mr. Soller was 72 years old and His wife nearly 73. They were both natives of Germany. Mr. Soller served during the Civil war in the One Hundred and Fourth Pennsylvania volunteers. : LE every indication of being permanent. ' Com- been apparently in good health up to a short - ‘man was consumed with the exception or Tir