m—— BY P. GRAY Ink Slings. I'd rather be a cake of ice, Away up at the pole, Or be a poor Hawaiian And be boss’d around by Dole ; Than be that learned Algie Crook, Professor, fool, or “sis,” Who lived for forty years or more And never had a kiss, —It is not strange that there was so much blow about Buffalo on Monday. ROOSEVELT was there in all his glory and gush. —The population of Ireland has decreas- ed 5.3 per cent. during the last decade, but the falling off is easily accounted for when the increase in the New York police force during the same period is noted. —GROVER CLEVELAND'S household is quarantined on account of the diphtheria and the Hon. GROVER is penned up inside. Wouldn't this be a fine time for DAVE HILL to reorganize the Democratic party, though ? —Our Presbyterian friends who have so lately discovered such a supply of sin in Philadelphia on Sunday, might find an ex- cess of the same article on week days, if they would scratch out the eracks and corners carefully. : — Now that Philadelphia is rid of its ex- travagant public building commission pos- sibly that city will be able to help herself a listle in the vital matter of making the Delaware deep enough to accommodate the larger vessels that cannot enter that port. —Even in the face of the fact that the State Treasurer reports a surplus in the treasury, people wonder why the Legisla- tare does not adjourn. And the same peo- ple boast of their intelligence and imagine they understand the motives that move men. —Failing in other reforms the failure of the Legislature to provide a way for the payment of old Legislative sprees, gives hope that we will have at least a little junket reform, out of the long session at Harrisburg. For this much we should be truly thankfal. —England now has 249,000 soldiers in South Africa. Already 14,978 have died and 17,209 have been wounded and the trouble is not over yet. Verily, Oom PAUL spoke the truth when he said : “We may be conquered, but if so it will be at a cost that will stagger humanity.’ —It’s a pull between the regular and the JEFFERSONIAN Democrats of Philadel- phia, as to which shall be allowed to fur- nish chairman CREASY with headquarters for his organization. Mr. CREASY would doubtless vastly prefer that each of these, so-called, Democratic bodies would get to pulling to see which can furnish the party nominees the greatest number of votes. —ANDREW CARNEGIE’S latest gift is an amazing example of that remarkable man’s generosity. He has given $11,000,000 to pay the expenses of deserving Scottish students at the leading Universities of Scotland. It is wonderful, and at last people should begin to regard, serionsly, Mr. CARNEGIE’S oft-expressed intention of dying poor. —Minister CONGER is evidently going to have trouble making himself the candidate of the Republicans of Iowa for Governor. He didn’t “fight, bleed and die’’ realistic- ally enough in the siege of Pekin to stam- pede the Republicans of his native State to him, and it is beginning to look as if the President will find himself the embarrassed owner of a white elephant. —After ALGIE CROOK’S announcement that he had never been kissed it was too much for Dr. Clark, of the Chicago Univer- sity, to advise young men not to marry College bred girls. The Doctor and ALGIE are evidently friends of the closest kind, for it is quite apparent that he is trying to get even with the ladies for having permit- ted ALGIE to grow into all these years without having known the bliss of a kiss. —GEORGY WASHINGTON declined to ac- cept a third term of the Presidency because he believed it was not for the best interests of the country for one man to serve so long a time. Wonld WILLIAM McKINLEY de- cline a third term ? We apologize for ask- ing such an unfair question. Unfair be- canse McKINLEY is so much (2) greater man than WASHINGTON that he knows his country (?) needs him as long as he can stay. - —General BATES is home from the Phil- ippines and is being kept as busy as a man with the itch trying to explain the treaty he made with the Sultan of the Suln islands. The General declares that the Sultan promised not to cut any of our throats when we go over there and he was tickled so much with our flag that he run it up over his harem at once. Of course there is very little wind on the island of Jolo, where the Sultan lives, and the Gen- eral had to agree to raise $12,000 worth through the United States treasury and send it over every year to keep the flag flying. —The race question is becoming more serious with each succeeding day. ‘The North is just beginning to have a real taste of what the South has had to endure for years, and from the reports constantly coming in from all parts of the State the dose is not being relished at all in Penn- sylvania. There is no real reason why whites and blacks should not live happily together. The trouble seems to be that the latter do not appreciate the fact that they are a dependent people and as long as such conditions exist they must be content in the privileges given them by the whites. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 46 BELLEFONTE, PA., MAY 24, 1901. Ne Excuse For This Appropriation. Philadelphia is to the front again, at Harrisburg, asking that out of the treasury of the people of the State $200,000 be tak- en and expended in shoveling the mud out of the Delaware river. This for the sole benefit of the people of that city and its shipping and business interests. If the farmers of the country were to ask that Philadelphia people should be taxed to make the country roads so that the products of the farm could be cheaply mar- keted, or if the country merchant should demand that the State should be at the ex- pense of providing him high-ways and by- ways that would enable him to compete with those more favorably located, they would only be asking for themselves what Philadelphia business men, have the effron- tery, to request when they are begging the State to make the Delaware navigable for them. If it is either the duty, or the right of the State, to help Philadelphia by assist- ing it to provide facilities for increasing its business it would have the same right, and be under the same obligations, to aid every other business locality in the Common- wealth in the same way. Begin this busi- ness once and where in the name of com- mon sense would the end be ? When, however, we come to remember that within the past dozen years, Philadel- phia business men have contributed over two millions of dollars to debauch voters in the interest of Republican candidates, it is difficult to understand why that city should come begging for a few hundred thousand dollars, to open it a navigable outlet to the sea. It is equally difficult for the average citizen to convince himself that a city that can raise the amount of money Philadelphia annually does for the benefit of ward-heelers, repeaters, bribers, and ballot box-stuffers, deserves or should receive either support or assistance from outsiders. It is true that the Delaware river needs shoveling out. It is also true that the business interests of that city would re- ceive much more benefit from having i put in condition, that ordinary vessels could navigate it, than from the success of the Republican “party. But its business men can’t see it in that light. They go on dumping their money into the Republi- can campaigu treasury, and then have the gall to ask that the people of the State he taxed and robbed to do what they are am- ply able and should do for themselves. A city that can raise $600,000 in five hours to satisfy MARK HANNA'S political demands, as Philadelphia boasts of having done only one year ago, surely has little reason to ask financial assistance from the public when its bigh-ways become clogged with filth, and its commerce goes into a decline, because of a lack of enterprise or liberality on the part of its own people. Unjust to the People. On Monday evening, by a strictly parti- san vote, the House of Representatives at Harrisburg committed to the Committee on Rules a resolution to fix a date for final ad- journment of the Legislature. The resolu- tion named June 1st as the day for dissolu- tion, and in view of the present backward state of the business’it was clear that ad- journment on that day is out of the ques- tion. But Mr. CREASY offered to move an amendment fixing June 14th, or to per- mit any Republican to name any day that the leaders of that party would agree on. The majority preferred to leave the matter to the determination of the future, how- ever, and referred the resolution for burial in the committee. ] For more than three weeks the Legisla- ture has been dragging along without do- ing anything of public interest or advan- tage. The time is being spent in the dis- cussion of trifling measures of limited in- terest. In the Senate absolutely nothing has been done within that time. The body has been is session one or two days a week for from thirty minutes to an hour each sitting and the House might as well not have been in session at all. It is not that there isn’t something to do. In the Senate com- mittee, on elections, the VAN DYKE primary election bill is quietly reposing and there are important bills in the other committees. But they are not hronght out for considera- tion and there is therefore nothing to do. Every day’s session of the Legislature costs the people from $2,000 to $2,500. If any good was being accomplished the ex- pense would he no just subject of com- plaint. But holding the Legislature in session at such an expense to the State in order to achieve some hidden political pur- pose is an injustice and outrage which ought to be resented. The people are not so pros- perous that they can take on new and need- less burdens to subserve the selfish ends of machine politicians. Money thus taken from the earnings of the people deprive the children of the commonwealth of neces- saries, educational or otherwise. Men who tamely submit to such robbery of their families are unjust to themselves, y es ——Sabscribe for the WATCHMAN. Bumptious Mr. Beveridge. Senator BEVERIDGE, of Indiana, an- nounces that he is going to Europe to study commercial conditions there. We are not getting enough of the trade of Europe, this bumptious Hoosier thinks, and he is going over for a few days just to put the commer- cial interests over there right. That reminds us of an incident in the life of the late General JoEN A. Log- AN. “Black Jack,’ as he was called was a man of considerable ability and unquestion- able force. But nobody else put quite as high an estimate on his capabilities as he did bimself. In fact he earnestly believed that no question was too complicated for him to master in a moment, and "however involved a problem might be he wonld un- dertake to solve it at sight. It will be remembered that along about 1870 the greenback theory ran over the country ‘‘like fire in an August clearing, ’’ as Colonel MeCLURE would put it. It was a rather abstruse question and puzzled the ablest minds in the country. In Congress and out, it was debated incessantly and on the hustings it was the theme of which spell-binders never wearied. Such intel- lectual giants as BECK, of Kentucky ; THURMAN and PENDLETON, of Ohio; CONKLING, of New York, and BLAINE, of Maine, confessed that it staggered them. SUMNER, of Massachusetts, and FESSEN- DEN, of Connecticut, ‘‘shied’’ off from it and in fact the ablest minds of the country were puzzled. Imagine thesurprise of all, one day, when General LOGAN arose in his place and announced that he was ready to settle the question “finally and forever.” He had studied the subject overnight, he declared, and mastered it. Thereupon he began a speech which lasted two or three days and nobody ever could find out what it meant. Since that experience there has been no- body in the Senate quite as bumptious un- til young Mr. BEVERIDGE, of Indiana, reached that august body a couple of years ago. In fact before he got there at all, the country had acquired some knowledge of him. As soon as his election was secured he announced that he was going to the Philippines to see what was the matter there and settle everything. He did ‘go and nearly got lost in the mountains. Bat unfortunately somebody found him and in due course of time he returned and with a flourish eof oratorical trumpets gave his experience in a speech in the Senate which was not unlike that of LOGAN'S on the greenback question. His self appointed mission to Europe will probably be fulfill ed in the same way. Speaker Marshall’s Characteristics. When WiLLiam T. MARSHALL was can- vassing the Members-elect of the Legisia- lature for the office of Speaker, a contem- porary observed that, better than any other of the eligibles for the place,he would serve the purposes of Quay. Stolid, courageous, without conscience and with no guide to his actions other than the exigencies of politics, he was pre-eminently the man that QUAY needed in the chair and he has served him to the full limit of his ability. No rules serve to restrain him when politic- al necessities point the way. No law holds him in check when party require- ments urge him on. He is essentially of the machine and obedient to the mandates of the bosses. In the history of the Pennsylvania legis- lature no man has occupied the Speaker’s chair who was constituted like WILLIAM T. MARSHALL. Slow in mental opera- tions, absolutely indifferent to public opinion and entirely reckless of conse- quences to himself or anybody else, he has ridden rough-shod over the rights of the members as he has trodden under foot the traditions of the body, and held in con- tempt his obligations to the constitution and the law. Destitute of personal pride he pays no attention to consistency and will reverse himself as readily as he en- courages the falsification of the records of a roll call. There is nothing sacred to such a man except party success. a : It is a misfortune that such men, can through subserviency to party bosses, im- pose themselves on the public in important places. It indicates degenerate public morals. If there were less disregard of the proprieties such individuals would be condemned to universal popular execration instead of being elevated to important offi- ces. If character, ability or fitness should be made the guide in the selection wu. men for positions of honor and importance, such men as MARSHALL would never be regard- ed as a possibility in that connection. The reputation he made two years ago as Chair- man of the Committee on Appropriations should have condemned him to obscurity rather than commended him for Speaker. ; ee—————— \ ~The Philadelphia ring is seriously contemplating the proposition to offer Speaker MARSHALL and his clerks perma- nent salaries to reside in Philadelphia. Their ability as counters on election day would be a great thing for. the gang, and would largely make up for the loss occa- sioned by the forced absence of the Hon. SAMUEL SALTER. Apology or Prosecution, Which ? The Philadelphia Press is unjast to itself and unfair to its contemporaries through- out the State and country in resting under the charge of licentionsness put upon it by Governor STONE and Supreme Court Judge POTTER. The Press charged that Justice POTTER who was Governor STONE'S law partner, until less than a year ago, when he was appointed to the bench by Governor STONE, gave his late partner and benefactor advance information as to the action of the court on a pending question. The Govern- or promptly and emphatically denied the accusation and wassupported in that course by the Justice who also denied it in un- qualified terms. If a public newspaper makes an accusa- tion which affects the reputation of a citi- zen for honor or integrity and the accusa- tion is denied it is the obvious duty of the paper to prove the charge or apologize to the person or persons injured, promptly and amply. The Press has done neither of these things. On the contrary it reasserted the charge and endorsed the character of its informant, hut didn’t reveal the name of the informant. That was an insult to the people of the State and an injury to the Governor and his former law-partner, the Justice of the Supreme court. Men in their position have a right to be believed unless they are proved to be falsifiers. The Governor and Justice are careless of their reputations it is t rue, in failing to bring the newspaper to account for libeling them. Tt will be remembered that while Governor PATTISON occupied the Execu- tive chamber at Harrisburg a Philadelphia paper libeled him. His reputation was much better able to withstand such an at- tack than Governor STONE'S. But he wasn’t willing to take the risk of impairing it by remaining silent under an unjust accu- sation. He brought suit and compelled the licentious journal to make reparation for its criminal libel. Unless Governor STONE is guilty of the charge he should pursue the same course. —We do.’ know why people and papers should worry themselves so about the failure of the Legislature to adjourn. If Bfvax law-making machine. is a good to have, the longer it lasts the longer thing to h we have the opportunity of enjoying its benefits and blessings. And the people seem to think it is a ‘‘good thing.’” At least they elected it and we sincerely hope they will get full to the bursting point, of just what they are getting, before it quits and goes home. ——— The Machinists’ Strike, ee. Seldom in the history of the world has there been as complete and at the same time as peaceful a revolution as that which is represented in the strike of the machin- ists which began on Monday. On the day set for the beginning of the movement 50,- 000 workmen went out and nearly half that many were retained at. their work by the assent of their employers to their demands. It was estimated in the outset that there are in the neighborhood of 100,000 machin- ists in the organization, so that with half the whole number out and with half of the remainder satisfied, it may be said that the movement was a success. The mechanics of the country have not had a just share of the fruits of the im- proved business conditions. They are told by the newspapers, and other agencies for disseminating information, that the country is in the enjoyment of a phenomenal season of prosperity. They are able to see an in- creased industrial activity and understand the values of corporate property, at least, to have greatly multiplied. Their expenses of living have also increased perceptibly but there has been no enhancement to their wage accounts. This has planted the seeds of discontent, but the result of the strike shows that it has not inflamed their pas- sions. : It is safe to predict that the machinists will achieve their purpose and it may be added that they deserve success. It is not alone that they are intelligent, indus- trious and well meaning citizens, but they are the wealth producers of the country, and have a right to a more generous share of the fruits of their labor than they have been receiving. Moreover they have set an example to other workingmen which prom- ises well for the country. They have shown that a labor movement which keeps within the law has an infinitely better chance of winning than one which is at- tended hy violence and lawlessness. —The strike of the National Association of Machinists for a nine hour day at the same pay they have been receiving for ten hours is on in earnest and the strikers will probably win because so many firms acceded to their demands before the men went out. While the grind on labor, skilled and common, cannot fairly be considered more exhaust- ing than it is, perhaps, on their employers, 16 does seem that there ought to be more in life for all . classes than work all day, every day but Sunday, sleep all night and eat a little between times. Of course la- bor can produce far more in nine hours to-day than it could in ten a decade ago, but prices for the finished prodmct have fallen at a corresponding rate. NO. 21. The Canteen Question. From an unknown Exchange. 7 When Congress abolished the regimental canteen it was supposed to have acted in the interest of the soldier. ) Bus there are protests, sporadic. yet constant, from all sides and every quarter to the effect that temperance in the army has received its death-blow. Dr. Parkhurst, of New York, in company with certain other gentlemen, recently visited the government post at Chicago in order to learn for themselves as to the results of the new law. If the pub- lished reports are true, they were not only disappointed in their mission, but also re- ceived in a manner not calculated $0 in- crease one’s respect for army officials. = In- stead of investigating the post, they seem to have been investigated themselves and given to understand that the mattter was not within the radius of their personal con- cern. 2 The regular army officer usually attaches an undue importance to his position. * To question his judgement he regards as an impeachment of what he calls his honor. Honor is something that does not belong to position or profession. If the country has any doubt as to this, the recent investi tion at West Point must have settled it for all time to come. Shoulder straps do not indicate character. The wearer may he a gentleman, then, again, he may be just the opposite. Army officers are divided in their opinions of the canteen—consecien- tiously so, perhaps, but they are divided. Some argue if is better than the old sutler system of the Civil War, which is doubtless true. But the question is not between the canteen and the sutler ; it lies between the canteen and nothing. Theoretically the army canteen would seem to be the lesser of two evils, but prac- tically the result is questionable. The theory is that the sale of beer is to be reg- ulated by the officers, and every officer is anxious for the good order and discipline of his men. Chaplain Nave, one of the most widely experienced chaplains in the service, says that he favored the experiment thir- teen years ago, but, after the most thorough trial, he regards it as a pest and a sin. During the entire thirteen years he never saw a canteen regulated but once, and that only fora few weeks, by the post com- mander. He declares that the drunken- ness, disorder and debauchery of the or- dinary canteen would not he allowed in an Eastern city for a single hour. He further says that “army officers, according to my observation—and I served with ten regiments—will not demean themselves by remaining at canteens to regulate the con- duct of, and the quantity of beer given to soldiers. A man intolerant of the rows of drinking men, who with a strong hand should restrict sales, would defeat. the ob- jeots in view : first and foremost, to make money ; second, to keep men from going to outside drinking places. My observa- tion is that the least regulated saloons are army ocanteens.’’ ; 2 This is reasonable. Does any one believe that a glass of beer a day is going to pre- vent a soldier from going outside and get- ting drunk? At Fort Niobrara he states that four hundred men. consumed from three to four carloads of beer every month, The noise of the saloon could be heard dur- ing worship in the chapel nearby, the drunken, howling crowds taking up the hymns and repeating them in their blas- phemous derision. The officers might have stopped it, but they didn’t, and they won’. The canteen is gone ; it may re- turn, but if it does let the world know that it is in the interest of drunkenness and not temperance. ————— He Was Eligible. From the Johnstown Democrat. The ladies who are in attendance at the missionary meetings in connection with the Presbyterian General Assembly, in Phila- delphia this week, visited Girard College but they could not take their husbands along owing to a peculiar provision in the will of the founder of that institution, who stipulated that no minister of the Gospel of any denomination should ever be permit- ted within the gates. Which recalls the case of Morrow B. Lowry, State Senator from Erie from 1862 to 1870. He desired to visit the college and approached the en- trance in white necktie, long tailed coat, spectacles aud other clerical attachments. The attendant supposing him to be a min- ister, told him he could not be admitted. The Senator, somewhat incensed, respond- ed, “What the h—I’s the reason I can’t?’ whereupon the gate was swung wide open and the attendant said, ‘Walk right in, sir; I see you are eligible.” : Wearied in the Long Struggle. From the Boston Herald. : ! ! Despite the Philadelphia pation to Quay, this man is apparently in a despond- ent mood. He is having to labor rat to maintain his ascendancy for a man on the eve of 70 years. He fought himself in- to the Senate again, and the shouts of those who had come ont to greet him were still in his ears, but the elasticity of tempera- ment necessary for the enjoyment of fight- ing was apparently in a considerable de- gree of the past with him. He remember- ‘ed that one of the most subservient tools he had ever had, in the present Governor of Pennsylvania, had ventured to rebel against him in an important recent in- stance, and that be had not held the State Legislature altogether in the hollow of his band in another. There is a certain weari- ness in his acknowledgment of the latest tribute paid him, for which those who have kept a close run of the politics of his State do not find it difficult to account. Jast Sec. From the Ebensburg Mountaineer Herald, 2 Gi An exchange says that if a new behind his back he would adopt another calling. The exchange is mistaken, The newspaper man who succeeds expects to be | maligned by every law hreaker, swindler and hypocrite, every carping critic and every lover of notoriety who is i nored, and in fact by all persons who do not agree with him on public and private matters, rr reeee— Spawls from the ¥Keystone. —It took twenty-six bullets to kill a mad dog which raided Plymouth on Tuesday. —Bodies of the three miners drowned in the Silver Brook mine, Hazleton, were re- covered Wednesday. » —The new Lutheran church at Curwens- ville was dedicated last Sunday. The build- ing is of white stone, and one of the most beautiful churches in that place. —The Clinton county jail at Lock Haven contains no prisoners now, the last one being discharged last Thursday, so the outlook for criminal business at the next term of court in that county is very slim. —Arthur Keefer and Charles Smith, each aged about 13 years, have disappeared from the Boys’ Industrial Home, and an appeal has been issued to police, conductors and trainmen to apprehend them. —Rev. Gideon H. Day, known as the fath- er of the Central Pennsylvania Methodist Conference, died at his home in Riverside Thursday morning. He was born in Elliott Mills, Md., 1816, dying on the anniversary of his birth—May 16th. —Nelson Holcomb, a 14-year-old boy, of Central, Columbia county, shot and killed a 300-pound black bear near his home on Tues- day. The boy fired but one shot from a navy revolver, and is very proud of his suec- cess as a nimrod. —1It is said now that the new trolley line connecting Johnstown with Windber will be in operation on June 1st, in which event it will be possible for Somerset people to visit the big coal town without having to drive three miles over a rough road from Paint Creek. : —George Kepple, a carpenter, was crushed to death by a wagon loaded with flour run- ing over him in the Cambria Steel company’s yards at Johnstown Friday. A singletree struck him and knocked him down and the wheel passed over his breast. Kepple was born at Blairsville. He leaves a wife and family. —Charles L. Collison was committed to the county jail at Honesdale, on Tues- day night, for six days, to be fed on bread and water, because he refused to pay a fine of $4 for working in his garden on Sunday last. Collison is a member of the Seventh Day Adventists church at Chariel. —At the Wallace show in Williamsport Tuesday evening, the copper globe, which is propelled up the spiral incline by Miss French, suddenly swerved and fell off, when about fifteen feet from the ground. Miss French was at first dazed when taken out, and limped to the dressing room. Shé did not attempt the act again. —Mrs. Martin Forry, of Carroll township, Perry county, while feeding her chickens Monday evening stooped down to pick up something and in doing so struck her left eye against an upright stick. The injury was so painful that she was taken to town and Dr. Moore extracted a splinter one-half inch long from her eye ball, —Arthur Cross a farmer, living at Jack- sonville, Mercer county, predicted that he would die on Friday on last week. Despite the ridicule of his friends, he clung to his assertion, although he said he Gould not tel the manner of his death. His prediction came true to the letter, for on the day ‘he said he would die he was instantly killed by a bolt of lightning. in —Walter Walker, book-keeper for J. H. Pihaler, a grocer of Meyersdale, while in the act of filling an electric cigar lighter in the store Thursday evening was seriously burn- ed about the face, head and arms. He had just finished the task and put aside a jar con- taining gasoline, a few feet away, when the explosion occurred through his trying the sparker. The gasoline in the jar went off. —The Babcock Lumber company has bought the entire town of Arrow, Somerset county. The purchase includes a new saw mill with a capacity of 70,000 feet of lumber aday, a planing mill, five miles of railroad, two locomotives, ten ears, a large pond for the storage of lumber, 3,000,000 feel of hem- lock, cherry and popular lumber in the yard, 5,000,000 feet in long and 60,000,000 feet of standing lumber, sixty houses, a gen- eral store, postoffice, a school house, a church, and a blacksmith shop. —Ex-sheriff Smith, of Clearfield, had a narrow escape from death Monday night. He was driving from Curwensville and while crossing the track his buggy was struck by a freight train and knocked into smithereens. Frank was dragged along for a hundred feet and received several cuts about the head and face. The horse was also badly hurt. The sheriff says an insurance agent saved his life, as he sold hima $5,000 ac- cident policy in the Traveller's some time ago, and if he hadn’t had that policy, his name would have been “Dennis” sure. It was a very close call. —Vice President Roosevelt and party pass- ed through Lock Haven Tuesday afternoon on the east bound Buffalo flyer. The Vice President was on his way east from Buffalo. The train stopped only about a minute,which did not give any one the coveted opportunity of shaking the distinguished gentleman by the hand, and as he did not take the trouble to rise from his chair, the small crowd as- sembled at the station were subjected to a disappointment. The Vice President travel- ed in 4 special Pullman car, which was on the rear end of the train. He was the chief guest of honor at the opening of the exposi- tion Monday. HA ER —The portion of Franklin county around the village of Concord, in the Kittatinny mountains, is stirred up over bears. Quite a number of the black variety have lately been seen there. Sam Clouser, the United States mail carrier from New Germantown to Concord, saw two big adult bears cross the road ahead of his team, searing his horses so that by the time he quieted them the bears were gone. He now has two big dogs with him as body guards. Saturday last Budd and Roscoé Hockenberry, in driving through Cited | ‘The Narrows,” had their horses driven antic by an immense bear jumping across man knew how many knocks he per zrntio by : Immense bear Jumping the road just a few pacesin front of them. The bear stopped long enough for them to dash past and then ambled off’. Henry Hop- plesaw two, evidently mates, in a field of James Robertson, a mile from Concord, and notified a party of men who are on their trail, but have not yet reported with the bear meat. : Bare