8Y PRP. GRAY MEEK. ES ——— - Ink Slings. —The little green apple hangs up on the tree The bad little boy chuckles with glee He eats one or two, then jumps his trollee And away he is hauled to the cem-e-ter-ee. —The country is safe. Mr. MORGAN. has returned from Europe. _ ~The weather hasn’t even gotten warm enough to give the mad dog his day. ~—T¢ is quite possible that with the leaks in the Postoffice Department stopped up one cent postage rates might be ‘secured to the public. —A little rain-fall now and then, is relished by all sorts of men, but when it starts and can not stop, we wish we'd never seen a drop. —It is a question now as to which i is the mosé enjoyable in Delaware. ADDICKISM' or mob rule. - It might be that the former engendered the latser. —Sir Thomas and his Shamrocks have arrived, May their stay be as fall of joy for them as it can be under such circumstances as defeat always brings. —By making a splendid ticket the Democrats of Clearfield county have. taken a long lead in the race for offices that will have its finals in November. —The higher they lift the lid from the post-office scandals in Washington the more apparent it becomes that Republican spell- binders next fall will bave to devote all their time to mixing white-wash. . —The moon changed early yesterday morning and the weather-wise looked for a change of weather, but from the appear- ance. of the sky the ground will be soaked worse than ever by the time the moon gets tall. - —Stories wafted up from the seashore on the first breezes caused by the rush of sum- mer guests show that the foolish bathers were not 'all drowned last summer. There was a few of them left to make trouble for the guards. " —The Pennsylvania building at the World’s fair at St. Louis may be without character, as the Philadelphia papers allege, bui certain it is that if the average Philadelphia public’ character had much prominence in the building there would be no building at all. —The way Judge LovE and Col. ED- WARD CHAMBERS speak to one another as they pass by would turn a pail of boiling water into a solid block of ice. Youjknow the Colonel thinks he could lift the judi- cial ermine of Centre county out of the mire it bas been trailed in these past ten years. —After changing the tariff forty-eight tithes in forty-two years the: Republicans can hardly claim to have practice back of their already begun campaign preaching against “tariff tinkering.”” Forty-eight times in forty-two years is pretty high, so it is little wonder they arrogate to them- selves superior knowledge as tinkers. —Out at Livingston, Montana, the farm- ers are organizing to stampede ‘the grass- hoppers. The pestiferous little insects are eating up all the grass. In this part of the country grasshoppers or anything else that would venture into a grass field with- out a life preserver and a bathing suit would be taking their life in their own hands. —The promotion of the traitors who be- strayed King ALEXANDER, of Servia, and his Queen, to positions of rank in the ad- ministration of the new King isa fitting end to a chapter of the most dastardly crimes that has ever blighted the history of civilization. Words illy express the horrors that were perpetrated at Bel- grade and had they been committed in the semi-civilized Philippines or wilds of Africa all the powers of the earth would have rushed in to henevolently assimilate the barbarians. : —The work of a Delaware mob in bat- tering down the work house doors at Wil- mington and burning at the stake, the negro, GEORGE WHITE, who was accused of assaulting Miss HELEN BIsHOP, sounded so much like the South that the partisan Republican papers of the North should be excused if they get a little twisted in their geography just now and locate it down in Georgia. Such spectacles would not startle the public as frequently as they do if courts of justice served the people more and the sharp practice of lawyers less. —The Democrats of Iowa have brought forth an “idea.” Not to be out-done by their Republican brethren they have de- cided that the 1900 platform should not be reaffirmed and ‘acted accordingly at their state convention on. . Wednesday. ‘While the WATCHMAN is of the opinion that the silver question should be eliminated from the campaign of 1904 it does not repudiate it as having been a tenable one in. 1900 or 1896. Exigencies of the times make the issues and no one can tell now what the country will need a year and. a-half hence, ~The thrilling round up of a band of robbers in the Seven mountains, in this county, came just in time to keep us in the fore-ground of public curiosity. Our crop of statesmen is getting low, big ‘weddings are scarce, and old grandma BARGER, whose one hundred and seven years were always good for a column or so in the city papers, has gone to her ‘grave; ‘leaving us high and dry as a pews centre. But if last Saturday’s performance can only be duplicated occasionally Col. Judge CHAM- BERS will ultimately come to the rescue of the space writers as a thing of joy and in. terest for all, VOL. 48 No Occasion for Worry. The esteemed Philadelphia Press betrays an unwonted measure of anxiety on the subject of an issue upon which the Demo- cratic party may conduct its campaign in the coming presidential contest. The par- ty is absolutely without an issue, our es- teemed contemporary confidently asserts. The silver question is dead, it adds, and the people are so well satisfied with the DINGLEY tariff law that it would be rank madness to predict a battle on the issue of revenue reform. There is nothing left, it continues tearfully, and the party which has lived for more than a'century is threat- ened with dissolution because it has noth- ing to contend for. It is with infinite pleasure, therefore, and no small measure of satisfaction, that we assure our esteemed contemporary that there are plenty of issues and not the least available of them is the record of Mr. CHARLES EMORY SMITH, editor of the Press, in his capacity as Postmaster General daring the administration of President Mc- KINLEY. In an interview given to the press in Pittsburg, the other day, for ex- ample, Mr. SEYMOUR W. TULLOCH, former- ly cashier of the Washington postoffice said : ‘If my warning had been heeded by Mr. SMITH,” he remarked, referring to the editor of our contemporary, ‘‘the Cuban postoffice scandals which so distressed the country and the present condition of things would never have happened.” Does Mr. SMITH imagine thas a more rel. evant or interesting issue could: be diseov- ered than these same scandals of the Post- office Department under his own adminis- tration ? We can think of nothing which more directly concerns the public than the expensive abuses in the postal service in Cuba and those which have been revealed contemporary and since. Mr. SMITH was prompt to come to the defense of the pres- ent Postmaster General and it would be in- teresting to show that his action was sim- ply in the nature of a precautionary move- ment to protect his own reputation and those of others who were close to him in the administration of bis office. ‘We assure Mr. SMITH that there is no occasion to wor- ry on account of the absence of issues. They are plenty and loud smelling. A —————————— “hy TR Venality in Public Life. The investigation of charges of corruption in Scranton councils now in progress bas already revealed some startling facts. It bas been shown that almost the entire membership of the munecipal Legislature of that city is venal, for two witnesses have sworn posit ively that one member of the body solicited a sum amounting to $400 each for eleven members, including him- self, and that two others had attempted to make separate bargains, one ‘‘for all that is going,”’ and the other ‘‘at market rates,’ whatever that means. That is a most lamentable state of affairs but who will dare say that it is singular to Scranton? As a matter of fact there are réasons to believe that all or nearly all the cities in the Commonwealth are sim- ilarly cursed. It is generally known that the councils of Philadelphia and Pitteburg are notoriously corrupt and itis commonly believed that those of Harrisburg, Wilkes- barre, Altoona and rie are no better. In the large towns of Schuylkill county there bave been all sorts of scandals * including charges of bribing and blackmailing school teachers and in a number of other boroughs there are signs of lax official morality in all directions. These things are attributable to the im- moralities of men higher up in the public life of the Commonwealth. Wheu the Gov- ernor pays no respect to the constitution and the laws, what can be expected of councilmen. When Senators and Repre- sentatives in the Legislature of the State give and take bribes as freely as they draw their salaries, why shouldn’t members of municipal Legislatures do the same thing. As a matter of fact the trend of public life is bad anc decadence is perceptible in every direction. Unless there is improvement in the near future there will be acarehy in Shee end. ! Can’t be Suppressed. It has heen officially announced that neither Senator SNYDER nor his colleague on the Republican ticket, Mr. MATTHUES, will utter a word ‘during the impending campaign or attend any public meetings of any kind at which the opportunity to in terrogate them would be presented. If it is necessary to make an active campaign, it is added, foreign speakers will be brought into the service and national is- sues will be discussed. The purpose of this plau is to keep down the discussion of the press muzzler and “prevent the ex- ploitation of Senator SNYDER’S connection with that iniquitous piece of machine leg- islation. : This. announcement is. characteristic of the QUAY machine. The stupids who are directing its operations during the absence of QUAY and DURHAM imagine that the people of Pennsylvania are so ill equipped intellectually that they may be fooled into STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. any absurd notion. But they are mistaken in that. The selection of speaker WALTON | to preside over the convention, the nomi- nation of Senator SNYDER for Auditor Gen- eral and the appointment of Senator PEN- ROSE as chairman of the state convention makes the press muzzler the issue as plain- ly as if it were emblazoned on illuminated ‘banners and ‘posted at “the” doorway of every Rebublican committee room or club house in the State. ; The inception of the press muzzler may bave been in the mind of QUAY and the exposure of his unlawful use of the state funds the cause of it, but the party adopted it and it no longer belongs to an individual or to a faction: Therefore whatever odium attaches to it must rest on the party and whatever injury it inflicts on the State must be repaired by the party or recompensed for. That being the case the intelligent public will discuss it and Senator SNYDER’S share in the perpetra- tion of the crime against the liberties of the people and the freedom of the press will be fully and freely disclosed. What Changed His Mind. The postoffice scandals continue to dis- tract the official life of Washington and shock the country. When the President returned from his absurd hippodrome tour of the West, a few weeks ago, he ostenta- tiously anoounced that he would give his personal attention to the trouble and clear it up before he left the capital for his sum- mer vacation at Oyster Bay. Now it is announced that he is very much distressed because he can’t finish up the investigation before he leaves for his summer home which he intends to do in a week or ten days but the inquiry will be continued in a quiet bus thorough way, however, he as- sures us until the Department is cleaned up. There has been too much publicity, it is alleged. This is what might be called a reaction- ary movement. That is to say itisa re- cession from the bold and courageous stand taken on his return from the West. What could have changed his policy and purpose in the premises? He bas certainly not been influenced by the notion that public morals will he eonseryed hy Star ebambor proceedings in conducting the investiga- tion. He must know that such methods are abhorrent to the American mind which favors the open in everything. The con- stitution guarantees to every citizen ac- cused an open trial and the right to face his accusers. The President indicated at the outset a purpose to fulfil that guaran- tee. What could have changed his mind? Probably the scent was getting too close to some of the President’s intimate friends. He has tried to create the impression that he is of the Spartan type which is swerved from the path of duty by no consideration. But his present course doesn’t sustain such a pretense. It indicates that some- thing has interposed not only to alter his plane with respect to publicity but to check the velocity of his movement toward a complete revelation of the 1niquities charged. In this course the President is hardly just to himself. He is not main- taining that standard of political morality and moral courage which he pretends to exemplify ia his life. Won’t be give the public a reason for the ehange. A Word to the Farmers. Heretofore the announcements have always been madetoolate to make them of much use to you, 50 this year we are tak- ing time by the forelock to call your at- tention to the great Centre county fair. Now while the corn and oats and wheat and barley and everything else you grow is in the ground and still shooting Heaven- ward it is time for you to pick out the big stalks to bring to the fair in October. Then when the grain is barvested remember the fair also and if you have some specially nice seed save it for the fair. Do the same with everything you grow. There are many reasons why the farmers of Centre county should take an active in- terest in the fair. It was revived largely for their pleasure. The gentlemen at the head of it have spent nearly fitty thousand dollars ip the enterprise and have no hope of getting their money back, or even inter- est on it. What they do want, however, is to bring the farmers of the county into kindly and pleasant intercourse with the townsman. The fair should prove the best agency for such a purpose, for it comes October 13-14-15-16- at a time when all the farm work is about completed. It isa clean, moral, wholesome entertainment. The managers conld make it pay immense- ly if they would license gambling devices and games of graft, as they do at county fairs elsewhere, but they have preferred to keep its moral tone up. to ‘the. highest standard and in doiug this they shonld be supported. ere the farmers, of Centre county to take a real, active interest in the fair this fall; making the exhibits of grain, fruit and stock what they can be the result would be ‘a revelation to all. Centre county would have a monster fair, so full of interest, so keen with friendly rivalry, that it would quicken the entire county into a greater activity at home and abroad. ‘the college. BELLEFONTE, PA., JUNE 26, 1903. Hoy of Clarion Denounced. It may be assumed that Representative Joux A. F. Hoy, of Clarion county, will be retired from politics at the expiration of his present term and that in some measure compensates for other disappointments and disagreeable incidents in recent political history. As least the censure of Mr. Hoy, by ‘the Denioorats of the county which four times elected him to the Legislature, in convention the other day, justifies the hope that he will not be elected again. In re- ferring tothe press muzazler as legislation “‘aiming to protect public plunderers and professional blackmailers,’’ the resolutions unanimously adopted by the convention vehemently denounced every member of the Legislature who voted for it. JorN A. F. Hoy was commonly believed to be in the service of the QUAY machine during the session of 1899, yet he was re- elected for the succeeding session. He voted for the McCARRELL jary bill which had for its parpose the acquittal of QUAY on the charge of misusing the funds of the State, notwithstanding the overwhelming evidence against him. . In the saturnalia of crime which rau through the session of 1901 he was popularly believed to be conspicuous among the ring leaders, yet he was return- ed to the session of the present year, to again betray his constituents by again serv- ing the QUAY machine in every species of legislative jobhery which was presented. The public bad begun to think that the people of Clarion county were no better than he. Now we may be permitted to believe that such an estimate was unjust to the people and that Hoy will be retired per- manently. After condemning him as they did in the recent convention they can’t re- elect him to any office without stultifying themselves and it may be interpreted as in- dicating that his character was not ander- stood and his practices not known. We would be glad to take that charitable view of the subject, It is a harsh jndg- ment of a community to assume that it deliberately chooses men of doubtful char- acter to represent it. Yet that of the peo- ple of Clarion county was forced by the Tepeated re- seleetions of HoY until now that hops wothing | — whl be Fy hin in the public life of the State. Wililam Foster. Mr. William Foster, whose death, as already aunonnced, occurred at his home Jouve 17th, was horn in Buffalo Valley, March 22nd, 1819, where he lived until 1848, when he came to Centre county, locating near. Centre Furnace. In 1856 he purchased the farm near State Col- lege which he has occupied ever since and bas been prominently identified with the life of that community for almost balf a century. These forty-seven years of Mr. Foster’s residence spanned the history of Pennsylvania State College. He saw the old stone building erected and the institu- tion, in its checkered career, grow from a poor struggling Farmer’s High School to its present prosperity, marked by many hand- some buildings and a beautiful campns at the foot of which a village has sprung ' up and spread until it now reaches almost to the Foster home. The sucoess of the Col- lege was a source of much pleasure to Mr. Foster, almost as much as his life was to it and its students, for until within the last few years, when declining years impaired his vigor be was a personal acquaintance and factor with almost every ‘student there and his cheery presence and hospitable home will be indissolubly associated wish many an old student’s happy memory of The present student loses much who has missed those pleasant gath- erings in the old post office where Mr. Fos- ter and Mr. Joseph Mitchell used to be the chief attraction and when their interest in a “fellow” made life a lot happier for him. Mr. Foster was a Presbyterian in faith, and a Democrat in politics, hoth of ‘which he inherited along with his genial, ‘gen- erous, upright charactor from his Scoteh- Irish ancestors who emigrated to America about 1733 and figured conspicuously in the early history of this nation and State. In 1847, he married Miss Maria Corl, of Union Co., whose death occurred several years ago. Their children were Elizabeth, who married William Everbart and died on ber wedding tour; Charles, United States mail agent between New York and Pittsburg; James, a graduate’ of State College in '89, and who died three years ago in Alabama ; Mary, and John, a State College graduate of '92 and now a chemist at Cumberland Furnace, Tenn. It is with regret that we record this passing of another of the pioneers, of this county, as their going means the gradual disappearance of that simple, good, peace- ful life which has heen of incalculable good tous as a people and the best counter: irritant to the selfish, hurried present day existence when one has little time or inclination to think of his neighbor’s good. ~—Subseribe for the WATCHMAN. BL NO. 26. Russia vs. _Penmaylvania. From the Wall Street Journal. The expulsion of the Londan Times’ cor- respondent from St. Petersburg is a net suggestive incident. This was an despotism, and an act which places in u class by itself among the asss Rugela of the world. er Bast let us not go too fast in condemning Russia while ourselves. Are we altogether bl 8? Did not, “the last Pennsylvania Li ture a bill a was almost as odious as. cent the Russian government? Has nos thot Governor of Pennsylvania signed that bill and justified his signature by a Satoment that, if anything, aggravated the offensi action of the Legislature? The act was on tended to restriot the liberty of the press ress by Dieveativg, among other things, the pub cation of cartoons, one of the most effective and powerful instroments for influencing ublio opinion within = the domain of ournalism. Nothing that has aed place. in country in years has been so flagrant ae defiance of enlightened public o inion, on the part of political bosses, as this.. But there is at least this difference. The Russian government was able to enforce its decree. . But the law of - the Pennsylvania government is probably unenforcible. A law that is not supported by pub! ge senti- ment is in this country a dead let ; The words of Daniel Wehner, tha great defender of human liberty and the consti- tution, are, of course, withont influence in Russia but they still ought toring true and powerfully in Pennsylvania. It was Daniel Webster who said : *‘All is not lost while. we have a single newspaper that is free. Given a free press, and we may defy opin- ion or insidious enemies of liberty. It in- structs the public mind and animates the spirit of patriotism. Its loud voice sup- presses everything which would raise itself agaiust the public liberty, and its Dae reboke causes. incipient despotism to peris in the bund.’ Followed the Example of Thetr Re: : Publican: | Bosses, ‘ From the Johnstown Democrat. : When that $50,000,000 emergency wat taud was being spent without’ check by she President in 1898 ; when ships which had been sent to the junk heab, were being bought at fabulons figures; when contracts for clothing were being made under pri- vate persons acting as go-betweens were able to profit enormously; when Uncle Sam was buying. explesive beef for feedin soldiers and n a great Secretary Treasury with executive grin trafficking with, J. oipont Morg tellows should follow the example of those above? Can we be surprised that bureau chiefs and clerks and underlings of all de- | grees should also seek a graft and work it to the limit? The country was drunk with the spirit of war. Duty and destiny were spurring it into patriotic paroxysms of benevolent assimilation. The old flag | was big enongh to cover any deviltry from the purchase of rotten beef to the betrayal of an ally. It was treason for any one $0 question either men or meth- ods. And so grafting in high stations and in low began to flourish. It was a time of glory and of greed and greed kept a lap ahead of glory in the mad race. And now Postmaster General Payne weeps when he faces the appalling mess of corruption by which he is surrounded. The country is amazed by the revelations already made. It is in dread of those which are yet to come. And while the President professes a determination to let no guilty man es- cape. ' Yet he permits Mr. Payne to sneer and to scoff at and discredit every effort to uncover the frauds and expose the thieves and scoundrels who infest the postal serv- ice.” Only See The Small Wrongs. From the Oshkosh Northwestern. It seems a little singular that when a colored female postmaster in the south is disturbed in her work the whole power of the Postoffice Department is instantly en- listened in her behalf, and yet a gang of thieves can loot the building where the Postmaster General sits and. he does not hear of it. A single mail carrier on a rural delivery route in Alabama bas stones thrown at him, and forthwith the Post- master General reads the riot act to every southern constituency; yet when a repu- table citizen of Washington makes affidavit that the department officials are in ‘‘eahoots’’ with a business house to swindle the government, Mr. Payne refuses to be- lieve and takes no steps to put a stop to it. The Northwestern believes that Repub- lican frauds are not a whit better than those of Democratic origin, and that a Re- publican thief deserves punishment just as much as a Democratic thief. There is ample reason to believe that there iy rot- tenness in the Postoffice Department and thas it is the duty of the Postmaster Gener- al and the President to stop the frauds and punish the delinquents. . Prices Ahead | of the Dollar, From the Rochester Herald, | ’ iy The purchasil ower of the dollar is about three laps be ind in the race with prices, Petes Rewarding the Conspirators. BELGRADE, June 21. 91.—The promotions are announced of various members of the military. de tation to King Peter, at Geneva. Colonel Popovics, of the late King iesanders palace guard, is created a a general and first aide de camp to King Peter, tain Kostio, who opened the palace gates for the assassins of the late King and Queen, is promoted to be a ma- jor and Lient. Cronica, who was on guard outside the palace on the night of the assassinations, and who was a confidant of the conspirators, is made a captain. > ——-Last Friday was the sixth anniver- sary of the terrible hail storm that caused such devastation to Tyrone and vicinity. 3 Fe Spawls from the Keystone. conn —Captain William H. § H. Stranb, Company C, i ‘| Milton, the senior captain of the Twelfth ‘regiment, has been at his own request placed upon the retired list. ~ : —The Dost office at Vintondale, Cambria > county, was robbed early Monday morning; 2 ‘over $500 worth of stamps were taken and the unknown robbers made their escape and so far as known have eluded capture. —The widow of Robert B. Wilson, of Cur- wensville, who was killed in the railroad ac. cident at Slate Cut recently, will receive $1,- || 000 insurance from the P.R.R. association and $750 from the Brotherhood of Locomotive | Engineers. —The saw mill of G. E. Whitemore, locat_ ed about two and one half miles from Trout. ville, Clearfield county, was totally destroy- ed by fire one day recently, together with about 100,000 feet of hard wood timber. Loss f | $3,000 with no insurance. —R. A. Brainard, postmaster of Curwens- ville and editor of the Semi-Weekly Review, suffered a very serious injury to ome of his arms Thursday evening by the explosion of a gasolene engine in an ice cream factory in that place. Hs may lose the arm. : —The quarantine ‘has been removed from the town of Cross Forks. This is certainly good news to people of that much affected town. This week finishes the fumigation of lumber camps and infected houses in the vil- lage where the disease existed and there are none now ill with it. —Riston Bennett. the negro who accident” ally shot himself at Gallitzin Sunday and was | admitted to the hospital, at Altoona, died at that institution Monday evening from the effects of the wound. The bullet had pierced the liver and punctured the intestines. Bennett was aged about 35 years. —According to the home newspapers, com- mittee on invitations, etc. Lock Haven will this year knock the spots off the bigges Fourth of July celebration that has ever oc- curred in Central Pennsylvania. But Hunt- ingdon and Philipsburg: are both in the ring yet, and Johnstown is feeding on gun powde: and bunting for the fray. = * ‘ —Charles Weest, fireman, whose home is i at Washington, Pa, fell off his engine, haul- ing Chicago and, St. Louis express, early Sun- day morning at Latrobe, and was instantly killed.” The engineer of the train did not no- tice Weest’s disappearance until the steam began ‘to get low. The train was stopped near Latrobe station and in a short time the body was found. He was 26 years old-and a member of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen. _—Charles M. Schwab is arranging to treat rs the people of Loretto to a display of fine fire works on the glorious Fourth. During the evening: ‘the pyrotechnics will be of the usual fiery kind, but in the afternoon there will be a display of paper, which, when thrown into the'air, ‘expands into shapes’ of pigs, horses, policemen, etc. The evening exhibition will last over two hours and will be in charge of two experts sent from the factory. Loretto 8 | is strictly fortunate in having sucha thought. ful adopted son: '—Tuesday the constitutiondlity ‘of the h tha Bp g Nor nydae whic hridoa across pidge at Towishnrs isto be constincred, was argued before the Dauphin county court. The law was declared unconstitutional by, Attorney General Carson, and to test it a mandamus was served on the state officials to show cause why the bridge should not be * built. Under the provisions of the act the State will pay half the cost of construction, and the balance to be divided between Union and Northumberland counties. —D. B. Kyper, of Huntingdon, in fifteen hours had fifty four sheep deprived of their coats by his shearing alone. He was timed in clipping one large sheep and , accomplished the work in just nine minutes, Mr. Kyper had gone to Williamsburg to be present at the paper mill dedication. While there he met his former employer, Hon. J. D. Hicks, of Altoona, who informed him he had fifty- four sheep to shear on one of his farms, and he would give him $10 for the job. Mr. Ky- per asked for some old clothes and went to work, with the result statcd above. Can this record be beaten ? One day last week while Lewis McCarty, ‘| eldest son of Al. McCarty, of Catawissa town- ship, Northumberland county, was out in the field watching the cows, he had a hair rais- ing experience. He was sitting on a big stone reading a book, and feeling something moving about his feet he looked down and was horrified to see an immense black snake. As he jumped to his feet the snake wrapped itself about his legs; he reached into his pock- et and got his knife and cut through the coils of the snake, which dropped twisting and squirming to the ground. After recovering from the fright the boy gathered up the pieces of the snake and took them to the house, where they have been on exhibition for several days. Plucky boy. —Mus. Mary Ettinger, aged about 40 years, of Burnham, Mifflin county, made her third attempt at self destruction Saturday night, when she tried to leap from the county bridge into the Juniata river. H.C. Welsh noted her peculiar actions while passing his store near the bridge and followed her out on the structure. He was just in time to catch her as she prepared to leap. Mrs. Ete tinger made an attempt to take poison on the street Wednesday of last week, and was Tock- ed in the county jail until her 'usband could be notified and take her in charge. ‘While there she told the sheriff’s wife that she had eaten a half a saucer of carpet’ tacks on Mon. day. Her story was ‘corroborated by her 7- year-old daughter, who says she saw her mother swallow the tacks. i x ‘~The most remarkable ‘run-in the history "| of railroading by a freight train of seventy- eight loaded cars was made on Wednesday of last week over the Middle division from Al- toona to ‘Harrisburg, the 132 miles being cov- ered in six hours and thirty minutes. This is unprecedented time for a train of the size and weight, though better time than this has been made’ ‘over the same division by trains of hot more than thirty cars. The engine hauling the train was in charge of engineer George K. Funk and firemen Tilden Stress ley, both of Harrisburg. The train left Al- toona at 2:30 p. m. and rolled into the Har- risburg yards at 9 o'clock. Once between the starting point and Harrisburg the train was brought to a stop to refill the engine's tanks with water and renew the coal supply—then off again on its dash towards its destination.