TE ——————— BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. Moxpay's Waxrts, A rod and a line, A hook and a can Of angle worms For the fisherman. Gum boots, a basket Of lunch, and a bottle Of bait for the frog That gets in his throttle. —The English have captured the Boer capital again, but no Boers, —The Punxsntawney Spirit wants to know ‘how to make men out of boys.” Let em grow up, brother SmiTH, that’s the surest way. —If an anti-spitting ordinance were passed and enforced in Bellefonte we fear that some of the street corner loafers would drown in their tracks from internal floods. —Tt is lucky for EGAN and some of tiie rest of his ilk that the lime trust wasn’t formed two years ago. The white-washing they got then might have been far more costly than it was. —Every man, woman and child in this’ community will join us in the prayer that should our lime industries be absorbed by the proposed trust they will not meet the fate of the old Mann ax works. —The English army has stopped buy- ing horses and mules in this country, but that is no sign that the warin South Africa is over. Mayhaps they are going to put the **Bobbies”’ all on foot so that they will have to fight the Boers or he captured. Russia is said to be satisfied at last and will not fight Russia just at this time and, we suppose, the Czar of all the Russias is breathing as easy now as all those stu- dent troubles and attempts at assassination will permit. — Yesterday brought the hands out of the pockets of many a lazy fellow it was so mild and balmy, but they all had to find a friendly hitching post or store front to support them after they had gotten their flippers out of winter quarters —The pretty daughter of Admiral Hi1CHBORN who has persistently declared that she will wed young JIM BLAINE, against the wishes. of both her father and mother should have a care of the kind of bed she is making, for she will certainly have to lie in it. —The Rev. SAVAGE, of New York, who thinks that our vocations in Heaven will he the same as they are here on earth must certainly have original ideas as to the qualifications for admittance to the heaven- lv portals. We want another job when we get up there, for Heaven won’t fulfill our ideal at all if we have to be running around after deliiquents all the time. — Bellefonte borough lays 2 mills on a total valuation of $1,600,000 for street pur- poses which nets about $3,200. With this the streets are kept in repair for an entire year and the street lighting bills are paid. As the lighting, alone, costs $4,800 a year the uninitiated are naturally looking for the recipe by which council is able to keep the streets in repair on that minus $1,600. ! —With FLixN and STONE gone into a deal to capture the leadership in Pennsyl- vania from the ‘‘old man’’ there seems to be another combination of misfits on hand in the Republican party. While we never have bzen on the inside of the other camp, as seen from our point of view the only time QUAY will ever be licked is when some of the opposition takes an undertaker into the combine against him. —The drunken oil well shooter who drove recklessly through the streets of Ravenna, Ohio, on Tuesday, had sixty-four quarts of nitro-glycerine in his buggy and’ about one quart of fire water under his vest. He drove over curbs, fences and everything in sight, sending the towns- people into shivers of fright, but the fire water preserved him, for the nitro didn’t | have the nerve to blow out such a beautiful + ——A country correspondent writes to the Connellsville Courier that he “‘will have to decline to quit corresponding’’ for that valuable journal because he has ‘‘a position now in which he hasn’t time to do it" and editor HILARITY PLEASANT SNY- DER picks up the poor fellow’s English. in a wholly untenable fashion. Why wouldn’t the correspondent in question de- cline if he wants to quit or why shouldn’t he quit if he declines ? —The effort among learned men and women to fix a code as to what does and shall constitute a gentleman is likely to result iu little more than the effort. For while there are, in general, many char- acteristics that must be found in a person, before he can properly lay claim to the honor of being a gentleman, they are so widely diverging in their nature as to make any set rule impossible. A gentleman might be found ‘in the ‘occupant of the crudest backwoods hut as well as in the cultured, refined college settlements; a gentleman might be found driving a coal wagon, as well as presiding over the fortunes of some great business enterprise;a gentleman might be found among the roughest types of long shoremen as well as among the first ‘cabin passengers of the fastest ocean grev-hound. Wherever honor, virtue, courtesy, in- tegrity and respect for the rights of others are found 1n a human being there can also be found a gentleman; no matter what code may be laid down by the learned men and women who attempt to regulate such things. | diferent, tobe sported STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA The Pittsburg Surprise. An Atrocious Proposition. The political sensation of the week was of the appointment; Saturday, of Major BROWN, of Pittsburg, to be Recorder of that city. The appointment was made un- der the recently enacted law known as the Pittsburg “Ripper.” The act provided that within thirty days after the signing of the bill by the Governor, he should appoint a man as Recorder of each of the three Second class cities of the Commonwealth. Within a few days of the time a Recorder was appointed for Scranton. «That was easy, as the Mayor of that city being of the QuAY machine variety, was willing to lend himself to the uses of the machine. But in Pittsburg and Allegheny it was ' different. In both of those cities the Mayors held out for their rights and the Governor took the full limit of time to make the appoint- ments. Saturday was the last day and he appointed men who have thrown the poli- ticians into conniption fits. It is not because the Governor has made a bad appointment that the people are sur- prised. After his previous use of the ap- pointive power by which he has filled the public service with political crooks and moral degenerates the appointment of Major BROWN caused astonishment because it was so respectable. But that was not the greatest source of surprise. The fact that after a continuous and exceedingly bitter contention of upwards of two years, with Senator FLINN, he should name one of the closest friends of the Insurgent leader to the office is what took the breath away. The bill was passed to tear FLINN’S political influence in Pittsburg out by the roots and scatter it to the four winds of Heaven. But in enforcing it the Governor has not only not done that but he has actual. ly strengthened FLINN in his entrenchments and made it possible to nail every friend of QUAY in the city to the political cross. Of course there are all sorts of conjectures as to what influences produced this phenomenal result. The most popular notion, probably because it is the easiest to reach, is that the Governor and FLINN have formed a political alliance. With MAGEE in his grave a man of FLINN’S temperg- ment would naturally run to cover and as STONE'S moral fibre is also of the spurious The Washington correspondent of the Philadelphia Press who gets inspiration, doubtless, from the Postmaster General, who is editor of that paper, writes such rubbish as this : “This talk of the United States ever having made any pledge to the Cubans is ridiculous. It would have been impossible to make a pledge. Where were the Cubans to whom this pledge was made? The few thousand men who composed the revolutionary army were scattered around on inaccessible hill tops and in swamps and certainly were in no position to demand a pledge or receive one Not one in a thou- sand of them ever heard of the TELLER resolution until months after it had been adopted by Congress. Hence to talk of the United States having made a pledge to these people is absurd.” As they say in the play ‘‘and still we wonder at crime.”’ ‘When the world was shocked by. the atrocious crime committed in the harbor of Havana, the blowing up of the war ship “‘Maine,’’ war with Spain became inevita- ble, and preparations for the encounter be- gan on both sides. So far as this country was concerned the ‘‘unpreparedness’ for such a struggle was appalling. But Con- gress was prompt and unanimous. With- in a few days a resolution declaring war was introduced and discussed. Pending the consideration all conspicuous men in both Houses protested that if war ensned it would be one for humanity. The pro- tests of faith in this direction were frequent and almost unctious. Finally Senator TELLER, of Colorado, who is practical, moved an amendment to the declaration of war to the effect that the purpose of the United States was neither conquest nor territorial aggrandizement, and that as soon after the cessation of hostilities as the Cuban people were able to establish a stable government of their own, the United States would withdraw from the Island and leave the people to work out their own destiny. That is the pledge made by the United States, not to the people of Cuba alone but to the whole world, and a more sacred and binding obligation has never been taken by any government in any period of the world’s history. = Government pledges are not made to individuals, but to: the world. They are binding so long as conscience guides the action of those be- hind them. No act of Congress rests more clearly on the citizens of this Republic than that pledge to give liberty, indepen- dence and self government to Cuba. It is trae that Cuba bas not the strength to en- force the obligation. She can’t collect damages for a pledge forfeited by the Unit- ed States with thirteen-inch guns on the deck of a wat ship. But the violation of the pledge is as much a crime as robbing a bank and only the most depraved will rec- ommend ite violation, necessarily involve the sacrifice of Qu Y and the old man is not lenient with those who betray him. In view of all the condis tions, therefore, it is reasonably safe to out of politics with the expiration of hb present term, and that after his election he gave STONE ‘letters of marque’’ to engage! inany form of political piracy ‘that would promote his own selfish purposes. "The al- liance with FLINN is the first exercise of the right under that agreement and it is like raising the black flag on the high seas of polities. Ee 5 e———— 1 {| The Capital Building. Interesting Political Comedy. An interesting bit of political, or sball we say parliamentary, comedy was played in Harrisburg last week, which deserves more than a passing notice. It was the actual revolt of the members of the Ways and Means committee of the House of Rep- resentatives ‘against the action of the’ chairman of the committee. It appears that the chairman, _ex-State Treasurer BEACON, has been holding all bills except: such as he personally favored in his own “inside pocket.” The members of the committee objected to this and as The spoliators who are striving to get in- to the State Treasury under pretense of: building a capitol have been getting some. pretty hard jolts lately, and ‘there was a time last week that it Tooked as if they would be compelled to be reasonably hop- est. When the Fox bill came up in the Senate on third reading Senator FLINN moved to amend by striking out the ma- chine commission, the Auditor General, monstrances proved President pro tem. of the Senate and Speak- together and by resoltiofh very | er of the House of Representatives and in- bill in the eon ‘00K ‘and in- | sert in their places any business men Hd on the | of high character and exoellent capaeity. Sl calendar. © 0 lis The amendment failed but ‘there were Only those familiar with the proceedings | enough votes for it to admonish the spoliat- of the House of Representatives will fully | ors of danger. Yan appreciate the significance of such an action. : As a rule all the ‘*pinch’’ bills. go to the committee on’ Ways and Means. The “‘pinch’’ bills are those introduced not to pass, but to compel people interested in the subject to which they refer to pay for killing them. This year all such meas- ures have been put in the pigeon hole. Mr. BEACON said that this conrse was adopted in order to save the reputation of the Leg- islature. Some of the authors of the bills say, however, that the chairman was doing the collecting act and keeping for ‘his own use all the proceeds. Be this as it may the bills were kept in committee and were | sion composed of unavailable for use as black-jacks to extort money from interested persons. 4 The funny thing about the affair, how- ever, was the brief life of the revolt. It. occurred well on'in the middle of the after- noon of last Friday and ‘ended before mid | night. Beacon, whose dignity was wounded by the affair, called up DURHAM who had gone to Philadelphia, om the long}. J ey distance phone, and told his ‘troubles. | yrinopdror of Williatspor DURHAM came back on the first train and WeCogirion, of Wi i illiame 5 gy HENRY Bub or J. C. BULLITT, of Philadelphia ; 8. summoned the recalcitrants to appear be- “ , of Philadelphia ; 8 for him. This they did with the usaal P. WOLVERTON, of Sunbury ; B. F. MEY- promptness and the boss ordered them to ERS, of Harrisburg, or RICHARD COULTER, reassemble the committee and reverse | Of Westmoreland county. We do not insist themselves. It was a most humiliating ¢ ) on all Democrats or even a majority of that thing far Zien to do hab Shey bod Bg alter faith. Bat we do insist on. men of known . m in carries | . : 3 BATHE re DIERot os Hie roat | (itegtity and unquestionable intelligence, lers have to get along without the proceeds | aud there are plenty of that kind of men in of their Dlacemailing schemes. : both parties in this State. There is the most urgent capitol building at Harrisburg. ent unsightly and unseemly mon: a disgrace to the State and should be com: pleted or torn down. But the people will not consent to such a gigantic robbery in order to provide such a building as is needed. In other words they will not per- mit the Legislature to put $5,000,000 into the hands of a group of political adventur- ers who will erect a $3,000,000 structure and steal the difference. That such is the the State themselves or permit anyone else todoit. Properly drawn the capitol construction bill could be passed thtongh both branches of the Legislature within a week. We do .,» APRIL sort, there would be nothing unnatural ia | ° their getting together. But that would. |. reach the conclusion that QUAY is 1 oing | other than a fit man possible. wpletegls, ~ The New Attorney General. The new Attorney General has been sworn in and ‘attended his first Cabinet was introduced to his assoziates and ac- cording to the newspaper reports of the af- fair, he made a favorable impression. of affairs, has been making $100,000 a year as attorney for the. CARNEGIE steel com- parv and affiliated corporations, and knows how +» make himself agreeable ii such a company as he met at the President's cabinet table. He was gracious enongh, it may be said that the country is safe, | It is to be hoped now that we will hear nothing further of the Attorney General’s reluctance to leave his profitable profes- sional engagements and enter upon public obligations at great sacrifices. That: farce was over played in the case of Mr. KNOX, who hesitated for several] weeks before con- senting to the .self-abnegation. But it can he said that the hesitation was all to the galleries. In the privacy of the cabinet chamber there was no hesitation. The CARNEGIE concern having been absorbed by the most colossal trust ever created the attorney who had served it so faithfully was needed where he could do the most good. ‘Accordingly Mr.,J, PIERPONT MOR- GAN demanded his appeintment and com- was obeyed instantly. We are also informed that the new At- torney General will first turn his attention to the prosecution of the worthy and re- fined gentlemen of New York and Phil- adelphia who assisted Captain OBERLIN M. CARTER to rob the government of a million dollars or two a few yeas ago. = It will be remembered that strong efforts were made to prevent the punishment of Captain CARTER and they almost succeeded through the friendly offices of Attorney General GRIGGS, Mr. KNOX's predecessor in office. The announcement that the others con- cerned in the crimes are to be prosecuted | now would_be significant if it were not that the President tried his best to induce IRIGGS to remain in office. Under he entire lime interests of the cou! 3 While we are not prepared to makea ctatement as to the probable out- ‘come of it, at this time, it is true that the three big'eompanies operating here, A. G. Morris, McCalmont & Co., and A. A. Stevens, have all been approached on the matter and two of them have signified a partial intent to go in. The Democratic Organization. As thie time for the reorganization of the Democratic state committee approaches, public interest in the subject multiplies. A short time ago bat few names were men: tioned in connection with the chairman« ship and those were mostly of Democrats whose connection with the QUAY lobby in Hacrisburg, rendered them unfit to repre: sent the party. But withip the past week ‘names of men have’ been brought forward from all parts of the State, and under’ ex- isting circumstances nothing. but the most, direct betrayal of faith on the part of cer. tain leaders will make the election of any TH 5 fia The leading papers of the State have been discussing the kind of man ‘wanted and thJre is so wide a discrepancy in their that the subject acquires new in- 6. . A staff correspondent of the Phila- \ Times; writing from Harrishurg the welt long and with manifest sat- ots the proposition that the Demoo- a chairman who is thoroughly th the pevious practices of prac: tical city politicians knows all about the influences of ‘General Spinner,’ mean- sreenbacks in campaigning. Another r holds that such a man is not wanted, but as a matter of fact the chairman should be so thoroughly grounded in integrity that his personality would be a guarantee that he had no familiarity with the men | and 3 icated. ; ‘We agree with the views of the last mentioned writer as to the ‘present needs of the Democratic party of Pennsylvania. The hope of our party is in commanding ‘the confidence of the masses of the people aud aronsing the hopes oi the Democrats. Both these results can be achieved by or- | ganizing the party committee on the high- ¥ est plane, thus giving the public substan- til assurance that the party deserves suc- ‘cess and having acquired it will not sell it to the enemy for the consideration of pat- ronage or money. The selection of a man of the highest character for chairman will accomplish this result. : ~From the amonut of indemnity de- manded from China from the powers it ap- pears that the widest open door taey are after just now is that leading to the Em- peror’s treasury. 32 12, 1901. meeting on Tuesday of this week, when he Naturally he would do that. He isa man moreover, to say that he was pleased with | his environment, and all things considered manded the acceptance. “In both cases ‘he’ OUR FOREIGN POLICY. The President (advaneing to the footlights from the center of a ehorus of ‘cabinet’ ministers and Senators) : When we told them we’d make them' a And free them in time— That we looked upon foreed annexation | As aggression'and crime — "When we lured them by every assurance To fight by our side i And flattered their pluck and endnrance The fact is— { Chorus (smiling) : Why, the fact is, we'lied! The President: ; Now we're one of the great lying powers. In the days of our youth, a When struggle and weakness were ours, Then we dabbled in truth, But when we grew big like the others And strong in our pride, Gave our word to our weak island brothers, The fact is— Chorus (chuckling) : Why, the fact is, we lied ! nation The President : } We have joined the great circle of robbers. It was tong, long ago Ly That we criticised grabbers and jobbers And were honest and slow. be Now we're laughing from Main downto Texas At the idiots who cried, “But you promised us not to annex us!" For the fact is— ' 51 Chorus (laughing) : The fact is, we lied’! The President: od Thus the Czar swore to Riga and Finland With a lie for an oath, And then from the coast away inland He trampled on both, ; Thus the nobles who govern Great Britain . Told lies on. the Nile And canceled the pledge they had written In falsehood and guile. i And we, are we less than the British, Whose word is so glib? He must be uncommeonly skittish Who shies at a fib! Shall we yield to the masterful Russian As he perjures his name? ’ It is hardly a thing for discussion— ‘We must play the same game. Thank the Lord, we are not sentimental ! It is dollars and trade That govern the soul governmental, That's the way we are made. If we praise up the old Declaration On the Fourth of July And man’s equal rights by creation, | The fact is— All Together (winking) : Why, the fact is, we lie! — Ernest. Crosby in Life, These are People Who Really Mind Their Own Business. | ila From the Altoona Tribune, : No less surely is a private citizen's dwelling his castle, over which no hostile foot dare cross without his consent, save at its own peril, than that the same citizen’s personality is his own affair and not an- others. His pecularities, his business, his family relations, his habits, his opinions, his benefactions are his own, and nobody has either the legal or the moral right, to drag him to the front and expose his frail- ties or his virtues to the glare of publicity. It is true some persons enjoy the notoriety of public print. They forever itch ta. see their names in type and would rather be notorious than unknown. But these are the exceptions. The men and women who do the world’s work from day to day are quiet, unobtrusive people, and they decid- edly object to the mistaken kindness of the reportorial friend who would extol their virtues in public.and no less to the impu- dence . or the malice which attempts to make them the subject of public ridicule or contemapt. When one enters public life 'the case is different. He must then. sub- mi to the indiscreet and untimely praise of ignorance, as well as to the slander of ‘malice. Sometimes it is hard to bear, but it is the penalty which, the ‘American pub- lic man pays for the privilege of being a public servavt. . Feds al ‘Such Men are Few. From the Doylestown Democrat. dt . The Morgan billion dollar steel trust in- vited Abram S. Hewitt to enter that great combine with his iron mills, but he de- clined. . The reason of his refusal does hon- or to his head and heart, and may be sum- med up in a few words ; that be had some five hundred workmen, who had been en- conraged to buy or build houses in the vi- cinity of his mills, and he was not willing to endanger their investment by placing them under non-resident : ma ment, ‘which might close down the works and throw them out of employment.’’ Such an employer is worthy of employes, and be- tween them, there will always be harmony of interest. y i i {Harel The World’s Disgrace. From the Williamsport Sun. Ly The story of the looting of the Chinese by the soldiers of the allied powers was bad enough, but the revelations of ont- rages upon Chinese women by these same soldiers, now finding their way into print, are almost too shocking for belief in this age of boasted civilization. Those who bow to the god of war will have to answer to the great and only God for the deeds of infamy that have followed the invasion of China. As was the case in the looting, the American troops have been exonerated of participation in the terrible crimes com- mitted upon the Chinese women. re error What Japan Objects To. | YOKOHAMA, April 9.—The dissatisfac- tion of Japan with Russia’s action is not in regard to the Manchurian of reement; the leading ‘papers here affirm, but with Russia’s action in: Manchuria. Hence Japan declines, according to an important section of the press, to consider the abandon- ment of the agreement as a final settle ment of the Manchurian question. It is argued that this question should be brought before a conference of the ministers, like the other Chinese questions. em al ne. nt, ~The Superior court convened at Pitts: burg on Monday. — Mrs. Catharine Bunk, of Farmers, aged 69, was'on' Monday married to her fifth ‘hus- band; the other four being dead. —The repairs: to: the Everett: glass works have been completed and fires started and the blewers expect to return to work during this week. —Charles Parker, an aged citizen of Bun- ker Hill, Sugar Valley, was stricken with apoplexy, while shelling cern a few days ago. He fell off his chair to the floor and fractured “his left arm. : sna —By a strange coincidence an eight-day clock which has been in a Norristown family for over a century stopped at the very min- ute Helen R. Corson, an intimate friend of the family, died at her home, in King-of- Prussia, four miles distant. —An abandoned mine, which runs under the residence portion of the Association grounds at Connellsville caved in on Mon- day. About 100 yards of earth caved in on Connell avenue, carrying with it parts of dwellings, out-houses and stables, —Charles Wagner, employed in a saw mill at Lewisburg, Friday fell against a buzz saw, which severed his hand. Wagner picked up his hand, walked to the telephone and sum- moned a physician to his home, and then walked home and had his arm dressed. —The saw mill owned by the Indiana Lad- der company which was located on the Albert Shearer farm in Buffington township,Indiana county, was totally destroyed by fire last Saturday evening. The mill was new and had been only recently located at Shearer’s. No lumber was destroyed, and the loss on the mill is fully covered by insurance. —At Williamsport Sunday night, Mrs. Coney was astounded to see-a strange man walk boldly into her room through the front door. Her cries brought her daughter, Ella, into the hallway. Without any hesitancy the girl hurled herself against the intruder with such force as to send him through the doorway, when she closed and: bolted the door. Then she telephoned the police. —Chief engineer William H. Brown, of the Pennsylvania railroad Monday awarded the contract for the construction of the new elevated railroad through Newark, N. J. The name of the successful bidder was not made known. Mr. Brown also issued pro- posals for the construction of six sections of double track, aggregating thirty-two miles, between Lock Haven and Keating on the Philadelphia and Erie branch. —Mrs. Walter Li. Main, wife of the well- known circus man, has returned from Cali- fornia to Jefferson, Pa., and filed a cross petition to her husband’s suit for divorce. She denies his charge of neglect, and makes the counterclaim that he had neglected and abused her.- On one occasion, in 1892, when she lay at the point of death, she said, he left lier and went to a place of amusement. She asks for their home at Geneva, and liberal alimony money, in addition to divorce. —Johu Gulick, who murdered his mother and brother, was taken from his cell into jail office at Sunbury Monday, where he was arraigned before justice of the peace Shipman on two charges of murder. When: asked “guilty or not guilty 2’ the prisoner was peechless. His counsel, J. Simpson Kline, answered “Not gafity” in'hisstead: Through out the whole proceeding Gulick showed no emotion, whatever. His defense will be insanity. —Charles Losch, 25 yearsold, a farmer of Tomb’s Run Lycoming county, had been missing from his home since early Saturday morning. Tuesday a party of searchers found his body in the forest about: a mile from his home. The body was lying face downward, the head resting in a pool of wa- ter only two inches deep. There were no marks of violence on the body aud it is pre- sumed that he was attacked by some sort of fit and falling into. the shallow water was suffocated. : —Tast week'a giant red oak which has stood as a great sentinel in the lumber forests of Knox township, Clearfield county, and which has been admired by hundreds, was felled on the job of Samuel Mountain and Clarence Witherow recently. It measured seven and one-half feet across the stump and cut five logs which’ scaled 7,109 feet. Thus one by one, says the Public Spirit these old forest land marks are vanishing and very shortly the last raft will go down the Sus-. quehanna. ald #4 . rd “Charles Clinton, the 18 month old son of : Harry €. and Margaret E. Smelser, of Al- toons, died Friday evening from poison.’ About 10 o'clock in the morning the child went to the kitchen cupboard where on a lower shelf was setting a dish ‘containing a quantity of dye, which had been, used in coloring Easter eggs. The child swallowed a mouthfal of the dye and then went into the sitting roo where on the table lay sev- eral morphine pellets, which had been prescribed for the mother, and which she bad let lay. fora few minutes. He caught hold of the table spread and in pulling it the pellets dropped on the floor, and he picked up several of them, it is not ‘knowp how many, and swallowed them. ‘A ‘physician | stated that two pellets were sufficient ‘to Sele a ts =A very unfortunate affair occurred Mon- day afternoon at McCartney, the terminus of the Moshannon branch. Johni Howard, a well-known ‘and highly esteemed citizen: of sceola, is mine boss at the Fairmont mines, operated by the Liverights at McCartney. That afternoon a couple of Hungarians went to the mines, and finding Mr. Howard be- tween the mouth of the drift and the tipple, asked for work. They were told that there was no opening for them at the present time. We understand that they kept on insisting that they be given employment, and as Mr. Howard was very busy at the time, he or- dered them to leave and no longer interfere with his work. This they refused to do, and in the midst of the affray that beceame more exciting, Mr. Howard picked up a shovel and in self defense struck ‘one of the men on the head. Unfortunately the blow proved fatal, the man dying not long after. Mr. Howard gave himself up tothe authorities without delay. Noone than he feels more keenly: the sad termination of this unex- pected tragedy. He is known as a quiet, sober and highly esteemed citizen, and there is very general ‘regret that this trouble has overtaken him, soa wily