By P. GRAY MEEK. pied nk Slings. “'_TIt is not always the ‘‘fast” man who comes out abead in the political race. # _ Those who Know say that Dr. LOCKE has Aunt CLEMINTINA beaten already in the congressional race in this county. Tt couldn’t be possible that Admiral CROWNINSHIELD ran his boat aground be- eause the coronation had to be postponed and he didn’t get a chance to show himself. , —Since Governor STONE has expressed his intention to take the stump for PEN- NYPACKER the blow pipes of the Repub- lican machine are not nearly 80 loud and vigorous as they were. In fact, that an- nouncement seems to have taken the wind out of their bladder completely. — With living expenses increased, thirty per cent and wages put up ten, whyshouldn’t the workingman hoorah for the prosperity that these times of the trusts have brought him? Just think of the ingratitude of the man whose ‘earnings are increased ten cents a day,complaining because his means of expenses have been boosted thirty cents. — MAY YOHE, the actress, who d esertd Lorp FrANcIs HOPE for the American of- ficer Capt. PUTNAM B. STRONG now finds herself deserted by the American, for whom she gave up so much. While MAY says is was love that caused her to leave the English nobleman it was her three hundred thousand dollars worth of jewels that caus- ed STRONG to leave her. He took them with him. With HusTOX as architect, EDWIN E. ABBEY in charge of the mural decorations and GEORGE GRAY BARNARD doing the seulpture, the best American talent has been employed for the new capitol at Harrisburg. Now if the commission doesn’t get its «shooks’” in too deep the pen, brush and chisel might be able to give Pennsylvania a building to be proud of. — Perhaps the young Madisonburg girl, who lost a finger while splitting kindling a few days ago, has a father or a brother whose hearts will bleed in sympathy with her. ‘Had they done the man’s work, how- ever, the unfortunate girl would not be in need of sympathy and her maimed hand would not be adaily reminder in the future that some man left for a womair to do some- thing that is certainly not in her province. —A cersain Baptist clergyman in New York is attracting large congregations by the introduction of such choir specialties as whistling solos. While we are not ready to discuss these brass band, open-air assem- bly innovations ministers are resorting to to attract the people we would suggest that this particular one might try a few swimming exhibitions after his whistling soloist has ceased to draw any more. It would be right in line with the Baptist idea too. —_All honor to the Democrats of Adams county ! At their convention on Monday they did everything possible to wipe out the stain placed upon them by MADISON A. GARVIY, the man whom they elected to represent them in the last Legislature. He had the impudence to ask for a re-nomina- tion and that was not only denied him, but he was given the stinging rebuke his treach- ery merited. The Democrats of Adams have redeemed themselves, bat GARVIN’S crime can never be effaced. It will go with him to the grave. —_Tt is needless to say that Mrs. BRAGG will never hear the last of a letter her hus- band recently wrote to her from Havana, Cuba. General BRAGG is the Consul Gen- eral of the United States at that port and in a letter to his wife he said some uncom- plimentary things about the Cubans. On the principle ‘shat ‘‘the King can do no wrong'’ Mrs. BRAGG revealed the contents of the letter and now he is to lose his offic- ial head. He will indeed be unique in the world of husbands if Mrs. BRAGG is per- mitted to forget this incident for one day of the rest of her natural life. — We pay $2.25 per keg for wire nails made in our own country. The same nails are laid down in England and other foreign countries for $1.30 per keg. The same sew- ing machine that our wives pay $40 for the foreign woman gets for $17 and the type writer that added $100 to the expenses of our office can be bought in any foreign coun- try for $55. This is what the tariff does. It enables unscrupulous American mana- facturers to make the home consumer pay ‘nearly double the price asked for their prod- ‘ucts. ' If American made wire nails can ‘be sold in London for $1.30 per keg, what fools we American people be to enact laws ‘$hrough which we can’t get the same article Tor less than $2.25. -— Everybody knows LYDIA PINKHAM and W. L. DOUGLAS, because their pictures __are lying around thicker than leaves in the autamn, but there is a new favorite in the field and these two old prints are likely to be turned to the wall so that the angelic expression of Dr. MELLIFULOUS JUVENILE LOCKE can be seen. He is throwing his pic- tures around over Centre and Clearfield counties by the thousand, but what good he hopes to accomplish by this method of cam- paigning no one seems to know. He shav- .ed his whiskers off so be wouldn't look so much like the twin brother of his opponent, CLEMENT DALE,and that has revealed such “an I-wish-I-was-in-Congress expression that already the people are beginning to say that !'he is too auxious. It is going to be a pret- “ty fight in this county next Saturday and if Aunt CLEMINTINA, the bearded lady,goes down Dr. MELLIFULOUS JUVENILE will be _sending out red plush albums with the next consignment of pictures Demat Spawls (rom the Keystone. —While telling how 2 friend had been striken with heart disease Lindley Fritz fell dead at Harrisburg recently. —John E. DuBois’s big mill at DuBois shut down Thursday after running ten months. About 125 men will seek employment else- where, —The Philadelphia Ledger has been sold to | Adolph Ochs, owner of the New York and the Philadelphia Times for the modest sum of $2,250,000. VOL. 47 STATE RIGHTS AN BELLEFONTE, PA. JULY 25, 1902. And There Are Others to Complain of. Tt is an easy matter to find fault. It is quite as easy to see the shortcomings of others. In fact,since the days of the proph- ets it has heen a difficult thing to get the fellow with the “beam” in his own eye to see anything but the ‘“mote’’ in the eye of his neighbor. Knowing that this is the patural instinet of most people, it is not strange that Dem- ocratic voters charge almost every body but ghemselves, with the condition of the party and the results of elections, when they are not what they should have been. It is true, as some complain, that the or- ganization, in this State particularly, is not as effective and vigorous or as earnest as it might be. It is equally true, as others as- sert, that Democratic leaders do nob give the time and attention to party matters that they should. It is the fact, as others tell you, that corporate influence is permit- ted to take too active a part against ns,and it is just as certain,as others argue, that mon- ey and frand are allowed to play a too im- portant part in the resul ts of elections in the State. ! With all these reasons, and there is basis for all of them, it is not to be wondered at that the party is in the condition it is, and that the majority against us in the State mounts up to the figures shown in the re- turns, But who is responsible for this condition of affairs but the rank and file—the indi- vidual Democrats of the State ? "It is they who make the organization. It is the creature of their own creation, either directly or indirectly. Without their co- operation—their work and their efforts, no amount of energy on the part of the organ- ization would change conditions. That body is helpless in itself as an engine without coal or water. With their assistance it could and would donbtless accomplish much. And just here is where the principal trouble is to be found. All of us expect some one else to do that which we should each take a part in doing. One Democrat has just as much interest and should take just as much pride in having decent government and an honest adminis- tration of public affairs as another. - The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania is not the property of any individual or any olass of individuals. One man has no more right under its constitution than hasanother,and if each man would look out for his own rights and his own interests by an active support of the party that represents and will protect them . we would have oth- er conditions in state and party affairs. The organization of the party, the prospects of the party, the result of party efforts, would all be very different. Neither is it right to expect afew leaders to bear all the burdens and devote all their time to party success, while we do nothing but sit back and complain of the way the work is being done.. Tney have no more interest in the welfare of the State orin the manner in which its laws are made and ad- ministered than we have. They are usunal- ly men of means who can live and enjoy life, io matter what the tax-rate is or how the State is plundered. For the beneit of others they do what they do in politics, while many of ‘the others put in their time complaining of how some things are done and how other things are not done. Even the leaders, if they were to try, could not attend to the organization and work of the different school districts, or townships and wards and boroughs of the State. Thigis particularly the work of Dem- ocrats residing within such districts. How many of them pay any attention to it ? How many of them are willing to devote aday’s time to seeing that all Democrats of their school district ave registered; or to pollingthe vote of the district; or to reporting the list of doubtful or wavering voters; or to ascer- taining where the absent voters are and how ‘they can be gotten home to vote; or to see- ing that the taxes are paid and arranging is work that the rank and file must do if it is done at all; that each locality must do for itself and that individual Democrats can do, whether the ‘‘organization’’ or the leaders are doing their duty or not. And how can they doit. This we leave foreach individual Dem- ocrat to answer for himself. In writing as we are we do not want to be considered as excusing the !'organiza- ion’? or ‘‘leaders’’ or any others, for lack of energy, of interest,or any practical work. We understand their short-comings as well as anyone, but we understand the dif- ficulties they have to contend with when the rank and the file of the party fail in their duty and their efforts for party suc- cess. The disaster of party failure, if it comes, will not be chargeable alone to those who represent the orgasization,to those who are recognized as leaders, to corporate opposi- $ion or to admitted frauds. The individual Democrat who fails to takeany interest or hetp along with the party work will be fal- ly as responsible as the others for such a result. means to have every vote at the polls. This: Present Party Duty. It has been practically determined that $he Democratic candidates for Governor, Lieutenant Governor and Secretary of In- ternal Affair shall be formally notified of their nomination in the city of Reading and about the first week in. September. It also appears to be generally understood that that event shall constitute the opening of the campaign and it shall be followed by a fastand furious canvas of the Common- wealth covering all sections. The local organizgations will determine whether mass meetings shall be held in the several coun- ties and wherever they are so recommended they will be held and supported by the State organization. We are in for a cam- paign of extraordinary vigor and it ought to produce good results. § Meantime there is a great deal of impor- tant work to be done which can’t be per- formed by stump speakers or at public meetings, and which must be attended to be fore the close of the first week in Septem- ber, the time indicated for the notification meeting. First is the completion of the school district organization upon which chairman CREASY has been engaged for sometime and after that the registration of the voters, payment of delinquent taxes, the locating of absent votes, and the care of doubtful ones. Unless those things are attended to properly there is not much use in holding public meetings later to work up enthusiasm. In other words it is no advantage to have a man anxious to vote if he can’t vote and unless the law has been complied with in respect to regis- tration and the payment of taxes he can’t vote. There are many and potent reasons why every voter should be anxious to cast his ballot this year. The manner of the de- feat of Attorney General ELKIN for the nomination for Governor is evidence that the QUAY machine has been perverted into a personal organization and unless it is defeated this year the Boss may order his son DICK to be elected Senator just as he ordered his cousin SAM to he nominated for Governor. In any event the robber- jes begun during the last session will be continued and enlarged on during the next unless public indignation is expressed by the defeat of the ring at the election this year. Unless rebuke isadministered the machine will have a right to assume that its operations have been approved and after that no complaint will be justified. But all voters will not qualify to par- ticipate in this just rebuke of the machine unless they are urged to do so between this time and that fixed for the close of registration and the payment of taxes. Therefore not only the local candidates but all their friends should be both vigi- lant and active between this time and the first week of September. If the Demo- crats poll this year ninety per cent of the vote cast for the presidential ticket in 1900 not only the state ticket will be elected by an overwhelming majority but the coun- ty tickets will be successful in two-thirds of the counties and the Legislature will be wrenched from the machine. That will be ample reward for the effort and every Democrat ought to perform his duty. — Another murder bas been added to the list of grave crimes in Centre county. DAVID MILLER, an aged veteran, will have to answer for the killing of his son-in- law. Heseems sorry enough for the trag- egy, hus sorrow will neither restore the life he so ruthlessly hurled into eternity nor militate against the proper punish- ment that should be meted ont to him. While he says he did not shoot to kill, but only to frighten his victim, human life is far too precious to be subjected to the pas- sionate whims of an intoxicated man with- out making of him an example. that will be a terrible warning to ‘others. A Win- chester rifle is too deadly a weapon to be trifled with and while MILLER is to be pitied for the terrible predicament he bas placed himself in, nothing should with- hold ‘the stern hand of the law in ad- ministering the proper penalty for such a crime. ad —The Williamsport Sun has just done a great service to the fraternity and the public, as well, by bringing to justice H. O. SHAFFER, of that city, a young man who knowingly furnished that journal with an untruthful statement of a mar- riage. SHAFFER went to the Sun office and personally vouched for a marriage ceremony that he knew had not taken place and while the item that was publish- ed really resulted in no greater harm than the embarrassment of the young lady and gentleman concerned editor SWEELY acoom- plished a good work when he arrested the peddler of untruthful stories. The prosecu- tion was brought under the act of June 3rd, 1893, and will serve as a warning to those who imagine they can tell a news- paper man ‘‘any kind of an old story’ without being made to answer for its trath- fulness. : : ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. D FEDERAL UNION. Quay’s Plans Disarranged. Senator QUAY’s scheme to further com- plicate the political conditions in Alle- gheny county has unexpectedly run up against a snag. It may be said that the Senator’s scheme contemplated helping Cousin SAM at the expense of the regular Republican county ticket and the change of program was not a voluntary action but one that was enforced and reluctantly adopted. - The Senator is a great stickler for regularity when it benefits himself or the interest he is promoting. But when it happens to impair that interest he is per- fectly willing to let it go to the dogs. In the case in point he bad things fixed for a big vote in Allegheny ' county for Cousin Sad but what would have been done to the regular county ticket, including can- didates for the Senate and Representatives in the Legislature, would have been plenty. Senator QUAY’S scheme was to have PENNYPACKER endorsed by the Citizens’ party of Allegheny county. He is already on the regular ticket, but the OLIVERS and the BrceLows declare by all that is sacred that they will not support a man on that ticket. Among their followers there are a number of course, who are equally deter- mined to prove their antipathy to the local machine but there are also a number whose desire to he regular would lead them to support. PENNYPACKER if he were on the regular ticket and the county ticket of the regulars with him. But he if were on both tickets they would support him on the Citizens ticket and the Citizen’s local ticket so that under the circumstances the regular local ticket would stand to lose a considerable number of Republican votes. For that reason the managers of the ma- chine have notified QUAY that if PENNY- ticket they will cut him off the regular ticket. This threat puts QUAY in a serious dil- emma. If he yields to the machine Cou- sin SAM is certain to lose a large number of votes controlled by the OLIVERS and the BigeLows. If he gives in to the per- suasions of the OLIVERS and BIGELOWS and gets PENNYPACKER on the Citizens’ ticket he will lose the support of the regu- lars, so that he is ‘between the devil and the deep sen,’? ‘so to speak. His. original intention was to follow the advice of the OLIVERS because he believed that the ma- chine managers would consent to a sacri- fice for the benefit of his cousin. But FLINN is not overly friendly to him or his cousin and will not consent to the sacrifice of those to whom he is sincerely attached and the result is that, QUAY will probably abandon his purpose of catching votes ‘‘a-comin’ and a-goin’.”’ ————————————————— Quay’s Reasons for the Nomination. Some of our esteemed contemporaries are wasting brain power and mental energy in pursuing an inquiry as to what causes in- fluenced Senator QUAY to nominate hie cousin SAM for Governor. It will be re- membered that the Senator ‘gave ELKIN to understand that the success of the party was the only consideration that came into his mind. . ELKINS record was so rotten, QUAY said inferentially, that his nomina- tion would result not only in the election of the Democratic candidate for Governor, but in carrying the Legislature by that party. There can hardly be any doubt of the accuracy of that estimate but it was unkind, for whatever of evil attached to ELKIN’S reputation was the result of his efforts for QUAY. "But as a matter of fact that was not even, in a remote degree, the reason which in- ‘fluenced QUAY to take up his cousin Sad. The fact of his relationship had something $0 do with it, and if there had been no other reasons that would have inclined the Senator toward his absurdly fulsome pane- gyrist. Butthe fact that cousin ‘SAM be- came the panegyrist was the “paramount cause of his preferment. When he wrote that QUAY ‘‘fails in no duty and is never beaten;’ when headded that *‘the capaei- ty shown by QUAY for the organization and direction of men in masses in the im- portant field of state craft,” ‘‘has rarely if and approaches * genius,’’ Judge PENNY- PACKER made his nomination sure. | QUAY has heen ungrateful to many men who have ‘served -him, He practically abandoned poor BEN HEY WooD who took risks of ‘imprisonment in order to serve him. He was ungrateful to the late Sena- tor MAGEE who, with DoN CAMERON, put up the vast sum necessary to save him from imprisonment in 1880. He was ungrate- ful to ELKIN who assumed the odium of machine infamies in order to help QUAY to retain control of the party that he might plunder the State. But neither of those men had flattered his vanity as PENNY- PACKER did when he said that QUAY was a greater statesman than DANIEL WEB- sTER and had gifts of intellect :equal to those of SHAKESPEARE. That was the greatess service ever performed for him and ab a great sacrifice, for no ratiocal man can since regard PENNYPACKER as any- thing other than a driviling political syco- phant and the inflated relic of a scrubby ascestry. PACKER’S name is punt on the Citizens’ | ever been equaled in ‘American: politics, | NO. 29. After While. From an Unknown Exchange. We're going to be just to our wards o'er sea, After while. But we're going ts exploit them upon "All the while. And till we have gobbled their lands, every oot, You can bet your last dollar the flag will stay put, And the Tight of our actions we’ll prove by oot, After while. I'll shackle. the trusts with a strenuous hand, © After while. I'll strangle the throats of the robber trust and, After while. T’ve got my own method, and got it down vat, And by the broad brim of my battered a : We've got to go slow till we're done frying at— ! After while, ' We've got to have money to makea cam- paign, After while. And I'm hoping that Marcus will fry again, After while. So I’ve got to be’ careful and not alienate The * big corporations : that pay all: : freight, So a trust-burdened people must patiently wait— For a while. Mr. Knox is preparing the shackles with care, Now don’t smile. He knows all the trusts—he was usually there— All the while. He'll shackle them all in the sweet ana by, But not until Marcus has fried ‘em : dry, Then Knox will get busy, with a wink .of his eye, After while. I'm going to get ready to tackle the job, After ‘while. And shackle the combines that ceaselessly ob All the while. But now I must ponder and perspire and pore Over schemes to connect me with nineteen naught four, And meanwhile I'll strenuously rip, rant and roar All'the while. A Campaign Expedient. From the Commoner, Lincoln, Neb. n As soon ‘as President Roosevelt returned home from his sojourn in Pittsburg the pers announced with a great flonrish of trumpets that he had decided’ to make a vigorous attack upon the trusts. Now ? : No, after the election. It will occur to the student of political history that it is much easier for the publican party to attack the trusts after a while than it is to attack them now. The President has been in office about nine months, and during that time Congress been in session for about six months. Dur- ing all this time the trusts have flourished. They have grown, spread, declared divide: and fattened off of the people. dent and his Attorney General. ulating millions by extortion, while President hob-nobbed with its stockholders and directors, his Attorney General having been the private attorney of those who ercise the largest influence in the manage- ment of the steel trust. If the present law is sufficient to destroy the trusts, why doesn’t the President enforce the present law and destroy them ? If a new law is necessary, why has President failed to suggest such a law ? Every day between the opening of Con- gress and its adjournment, afforded him an opportunity to recommend a specific law for dealing with the trusts, but he recom- mended none. His party was in power both House and Senate and every day pre- sented an opportunity for the party to troduce and pass a hill dealing effectively with the trusts,but nothing was done. To remedy, their failure the President, fresh from his visit to Mr. Frick, of Pifts- burg, fresh from his eulogy of Mr. Kn 0X the greatest trust attorney in the United States,now Attorney General by demand of the trusts,causes it to be announced that he is going to take the subject up “just as soon as Congress copvenes’’ and do something— no one knows what. : The voters will be credulous, ‘indeed they accept a campaign inactivity when action was possible, n even imperative. : If the Republicans make gains in congressional campaign this fall, the trusts Everybody knows of their existence—except the Presi- The steel trust has stalked abroad, suppressing com- petition, preying upon industry and acoum- ; promise of futu. . activity as an atonement for six months of —South Sharon lodges of the Amalgamated Association has refused to accept the 25 per cent. reduction of wages proposed by the American Tinplate company. —While Mrs. Morgan was holding the in- fant of Mrs. S. J. Goldsworthy, at Seek, two miles from Tamaqua lightning struck the dwelling, killing the infant and merely stun- ning Mrs. Morgan. the th : o —Luther Addison the fourteen months old son of Alexander and Alice Miller, at their home in the Friday settlement near Tyrone, on Sunday fell into a tub containing only three or four inches of water, but falling face downward the child was drowned before his mother could reach him. —A cyclone sweeping over Lewis and Cas- cade townships, Lycoming county, did great damage. In the tract of 75,000 acres, from which the Union Tanning Company had cut all but the hard wood, nearly every tree was uprooted and the work of lumbering is great- ly handicapped on that account. felt —Sitting upright, attired in a black derby hat, gray, clothes and tan shoes, the body of an unknown man was found under a tree in a field on Newry Ridge near Hollidaysburg, on Tuesday morning. The dead man is sup- posed to be Peter L. Gardner, of Troy, N. Y., fat | who disappeared from Duncansville three weeks ago. —Jones & Laughlins, the largest steel com- pany outside the United States Steel Corpor- ation, was re-organized at a meeting held in (Pittsburg on Wednesday. The capital stock will be increased from $20,000,000 to $50,000, - 000 and improvements and extensions are contemplated. There will be no change in the officers. the . —An item of particular interest to railway by mail clerks has been incorporated in the post- al appropriation bill by the senate postoffice all | committee. It authorizes the payment of $1, 000 to the families of railway clerks who are killed in the line of duty. Provision is made for the payment of the sum immediate- ly after such casualties occur. —Operations were resumed on Monday morning at the Penn Iron worksin Lancas- ter, which has been idle for eleven weeks owing to a strike. The men gained their point of an increase from $4.25 to $4.50 per ton for puddlers and proportionate increases in ether departments. There was a loss of $50,000 in wages during the period of idle- ness. —Six persons escaped from the Clearfield county jail Thursday night and five of them are still at large. The sixth, an Italian, fell from the rope used in reaching the ground and broke a leg. They gained their freedom by crawling through the same hole in the wall of the jail made three mouths ago by’ two prisoners who had secured possession of a steel crowbar. pa- — Five persons are down with small pox at Rockton, Clearfield county. Scott Luce and wife, John Peoples and wife and Martin La- borde who boards with the Peoples family. On account of the outbreak all employes of the mills at Lawshe, who reside there have been laid off, the usual services at the churches were abandoned and there is great fear of a general spread of the disease among the residents of the village. Re- has nds —A heavy storm passed over Oak Grove Friday morning. When the storm came up, the bricklayers on machine shop walls went into another building and while there a bolt of lightning entered the building and struck seven men, rendering them all unconscious. Three soon recovered, but four of the men were carried to their boarding house. All those stricken were more or less burned and _blistered. Charles Lenbart’s shoe was cut as though a knife blade had run through. Both his shoe and foot were burned. the ex- the —By leaping from the Maynard street bridge into the river at Williamsport a dis- tance of 35 feet, Fred Sortman; of Dubois- town, heroically rescued 7-year old Dellar ‘Knight from drowning. The latter with several companions had been playing on some logs when he fell into the water. Sortman was crossing the bridge on his bicycle. See- ing the boy struggling in the water he jump- ed from his wheel and made the thrilling leap from the bridge. He caught the drown- ing boy as he was sinking for the last time. —C. L. Cowles, of Bradford, went to In- stanter Saturday and shot his 19 year old i “wife in the left breast. Cowles was unreason- 2 _oly jealous of his wife, because he alleged she received the attentions of other men. They quarreled, Cowles was put under bonds to keep the peace, and not having supported his wife, she had left him and goue to In- stanter, where she was employed as a domes- in 1D- ay, the will point to it as an endorsement of them, | ¢;: in the home of Mrs. McCauley. Cowles and will scare the Republicans into inac- If, on the contrary, the Demo- crats make gains in the coming election, the Republicans may be frightened into doing something. If the Republicans who want tion again. the trusts destroyed, will quietly vote Democratic ticket this fall and make country show decided Democratic gains, the Republicans will be so frightened that they may pass a law before the next campaign. I —————— York Loan Goes to Court. ' YORK, July 21.—The refusal of county commissioners to pay the temporary loans, aggregating $135,000, which fell due last week, was the cause of the instituting of legal proceedings in the Common Pleas cours today before Judge Stewart by torneys representing the Farmers’ National bank and the York county National ba Two writs of mandamus were issued against commissioners Ziegler, Altland and Hildebrand, commanding them to show cause on Tuesday, July 29th, why they shall not draw warrants for the amount due the banks, each of which holds $25,- 000 of the loan. Of the remainder of loan $60,000 is held by the Security, Title & Trust company and $25,000 by the First No formal action has been taken as yet by these banks in the matter. National bank. followed her to Instanter, and walking unan- nounced into the house, discharged the re- volver. The physician said that the wound would prove fatal, and under his direction the | Cowles took his wife vo Bradford, where she the | is in a dymg condition. Cowles has been lodged in jail at Ridgway. ; ‘—Millerstown is to have a new bridge in place of the old one recently destroyed by fire. It will be built by the state and cost about $92,000. The bridge as determined by the viewers is to be Pratt pattern steel bridge with driveway twenty-two feet wide and footway on the upper side eight feet wide. It will be of three spans with a total length of 706 foot between abutments. The material is to be of open hearth steel with an ultimat resistance of 60,000 pounds to the square inch, and is to carry a rolling load of thirty tons on a seven foot centre to centre wheel base. The abutments and piers will of course have to be new, as the bridge will cross the river diagonally and the abutment next to Millers town will be ten feet nearer the shore. By crossing the river in this way the new bridge and the one over the railroad will be nearly in line and the turn on the bridge between the railroad and river bridge will be avoided. the at- nk. the opi SE BREE HL L SHE