BY P. GRAY MEEK. — Ink Slings. —~STED —The world’s fair at St. Louis sbould be kept closed on Sunday. —It Russia keeps on retreating she will soon have the Japs lured clear over into Europe. —The Delaware peach crop has bzen heard from and: if reports be true it has died in infancy. —With former Governor PATTISON, of "Pennsylvania, running as a dark horse, it wight be a long shot, after all, that will win in the next presidential race. —What more laudable ambition could the Pennsylvania Democracy have than to do at St. Louis ‘‘that which, in their wis- dow, seems best for the party and the country ?”’ — Just to keep the pot boiling there is a revolution on hand in Hayti. Let us see if the President jumps to the recognition of another band of usurpers as speedily as he did in Panama. —St. Louis hotels will require guests to d ouble-up]} during the continuance of the fair. ‘This does not necessarily mean that the diet will be principally green apples, cucumbers and watermelon. —Certain it is that when names were selected for those towns in Manchuria and Korea that are just now occupying the top- notch of notoriety in the war news columns there was no partiality shown for any par- ticular letters of the alphabet. —The first explanation of the stupendous scale on which the Panama canal is to pro- gress is made in the announcement that Mr. WALLACE, of Chicago, is to be the general superintendent at a salary of twenty-five thousand dollars a year. — JouN D. ROCKEFELLER, the Standard oil octopus, says that when he was a boy he could milk a cow. He didn’t say, however, that as he has grown older he has learned to milk bulls and bears and ev erything else that he can get his digits to encircling. — Russia having cabled for twenty-thou- sand square feet of exhibit space at the St. Louis exposition the public is naturally filled with wonderment as to whether it is her army or her navy or both that she wants to stow away beyond the reach of the Japs. —The receipts from customs having fallen off $21,000,000 dnring the fiscal year just closed and those from internal revenue having made an increase of only $3, 000,000 during the same period we might find ourselves reduced to the ex- tr eme of borrowing money for our expen- sive President. ’ - --Philadelphia has decided to permit the Liberty Bell to be removed to St. Louis for the exposition in that city. Inas- much as $15,000 have been appropriated to pay the transportation of the historic old bell there will be margin enough to pro- vide spirits even more exbilerating than those of '76. —Now that the real big political boss LovE has made DALE, QUIGLEY and chambers all get out of the road for REED- ER, let us see whether he will force DALEY and DALE out of the legislative race to make the running smooth for WOMELS- DORF and KNISELY. The latter are in with the machine and the machine is LOVE and LOVE is going to run it to make his own path way as easy as possible. —The Atlanta Constitution is filled with concern as to who will keep the buttons sewed on for the summer girl of 1904 who, Dame Fashion decrees, must wear suspend- ers. The Constitution ought to be old enough to know that a girl has no use for buttons, unless they be brass ones on a sold ier’s coal. Pins and strings do all the work for her that man accomplishes with buttons and nails. — Again you are wrong, Col. BAILEY, of the Johnstown Democrat, the Democrats of this country never made a platform that they invited Mr. BRYAN to occupy. He was the builder of both the platforms on which he stood and if our memory serves us right he refused to ocoupy the second one at all, unless it was built just to his liking. We are not opposed to Mr. BRYAN, but we do insist that he bas no right to be calling the kettle black as long as the pot is taking on soot as rapidly as it is. —The Reading preacher who made him- self more or less conspicuous in a hunt for an ideal wife has announced that his search is o’er, He found the kind he was looking for in Newark, N. J., and strange as it may seem none of the many requirements that he bad set up for her to fulfill em- braced the one that a would-be Bellefonte benedict prescribed in his advertisement for a wife. He wanted one that was ‘well built,”” while the Reading preacher thought of everything else than her physical structure. —The Pittsburg Dispatch says that a woman clad only in a night robe chased a robber across the Smithfield street bridge in that city at twelve-thirty Wednesday morning and when a policeman had arrest- ed the man for her she went to the station house, where she left a forfeit for her ap- pearance against him in the morning. In- asmuch as the Dispatch seems sure that all she had on was a night robe we are led to wonder at what forfeit she could have left, unless it was that precious bit of lingerie, itself. How shocking. VOL. 49 STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., MAY 13, 1904. Mr. Palmer’s Pretense. The Hon. HENRY W. PALMER, Repre- sentative in Congress for the Luzerne coun- ty district of this State, in announcing his candidacy for renomination makes a very significant and rather startling statement. He says that he ‘‘will neither buy the nomination nor bargain for it.’’ He re- affirms the principles of politics which he uttered when he first became a candidate for the place, which as we recollect the matter was that he would adhere to party tenets of the earlier and better days of the organization and would reserve the right to independence in thought and action under the direction of conscience. His neighbors who knew him better than he knew him- self, however, weren’t frightened by that declaration. They knew he would be “‘all right’’ and elected him. That they were not mistaken in their estimate has been substantially proved by his record in the House. He has been the ready and usually an adroit supporter of every partisan iniquity that political ex- igencies have forced into consideration. When the CONNELL-POWELL contest was before the House he was particularly rank in his partisanship and censured Represen- tative SHIRAS, of Pittsburg, because that gentleman, influenced by conscience, pro- tested against the outrage of giving CoN- NELL a seat to which he was not elected. Mr. SHIRAS is a Republican but he couldn’t stomach that iniquity and because of that fact HENRY W. PALMER held him up to ridicule as a sentimentalist rather than as a partisan which political interests requir- ed him to be at that time. But a change appears to have come over the spirit of Mr. PALMER'S dreams. In his announcement of his candidacy made public the other day he says “‘hribery in elections offends against good morals and good citizenship and unless checked will one day ruin the Republic.”” He never uttered a truer statement and probably never spoke more insincerely, though in- sincerity is one of his conspicuous char- acteristics. He probably is unwilling to buy votes besause though well-off he is somewhat ‘‘near’’ and he made his state- ment, likely, because he hoped it would serve the same purpose as buying votes and come much cheaper. Mr. PALMER knows that his party has been kept in power for a dozen years by bribery in elections and yet he acquiesces in, the result every time. Roosevelt's Wants and Plans. The President has indicated to a few friends what kind of a platform he wants the coming convention to promulgate and it may be said that his statement of the matter is peculiarly ROOSEVELTIAN. That is to say Mr. ROOSEVELT is characteristical- ly pbarisaical in describing the sort of a code of principles which he would have the convention declare. As a matter of fact he wants votes and he doesn’t care a tinker’s ‘‘cuss-word’’ how he gets them. If itis necessary to stuff every ballot box in the country in order to guarantee his sucoess he would promptly recommend the opera- tion and gladly contribute all the patron- age at his command toward compensation for the work. Since the beginuing of the government there has been no man ina really distinguished public office so abso- lutely regardless of moral obligations. But with a hypocritical pretense of vir- tue the President announces that he de- mands at the hands of his party a platform which will represent the highest virtues in government. Besides that he ostentatious- ly adds that the platform must be ‘‘in- cisive, decisive, concise and precise.”” In other words he wonld have it candid and honest in the expression of the purposes of the party. In that event it would be nec- essary to condemn the iniquities of the past. The bargain with the Mormon church to give a seat in the United States Senate to the polygamists of Utah, entered into four years ago and substantially re- newed recently in the postponement of the expulsion of REED SMooT, would have to be denounced in unequivocal terms and the other shady transactions including the Postoffice Department frauds would nec- essarily be acknowledged. Everybody who knows anything knows that ROOSEVELT doesn’t want anything of that kind. Every intelligent man in the country understands that ROOSEVELT pre- vented an investigation of the Postoffice Department by corrupt methods in order to conceal the frauds and the suspicion is equally universal that the reason he pre- vented the investigation was because he knew it would show the expenses of his luxurious trips of last year were frandulent- ly, and with his consents, charged up to the account of the transportation of mails. ROOSEVELT wants candor at this time just as WM. M. TWEED wanted it when SAM- UEL J. TILDEN was pressing that arch rogue toward a prison cell and his false pretense and flamboyant hypocrisy fools nobody with enough brains to protect him- self from a bunco steerer. or a dealer in ‘‘green goods.’ Quay’s Vast Ambitions. Senator QUAY may be a very sick man, as the Washington dispatches indicate, but he is not a man without ambition, accord- ing to a Harrisburg dispatch in the Phila- delphia Ledger of Monday morning. The old man is very much in public life, if the statements of that correspondent are to be believed. He is suffering intensely with ‘“‘cirrhosis of the liver’”” which is both a painful and dangerous malady. But he has his eyes on the main chance, neverthe- less, and not only proposes to go up higher himself, but to fill the vacancy which the upward movement will cause by first the appointment and subsequently the election of his son RICHARD. The biographer of QUAY may not be as devoted to his subject as BOSWELL was to JOHNSON but he is certainly partial in his estimate of the capabilities and possibilities of the old man. He frankly tells us of the plane of the Senator which are, considering his health, surprisingly ambitions. He will be re-elected to the United States Senate next February, he states, though why that won’ be achieved in January. considering the unanimity which he assures us, pre- vails, is left to conjecture. But after he is elected this biographer assures us that he will resign, dramatically, name his own successor and then step ‘‘into the cabinet of President ROOSEVELT as Secretary of State to succeed Mr. Hav.” We are really somewhat surprised at some of the statements of Mr. QUAY'S biographer and inclined to think that after all he may be only a ‘“‘space-writer’”” who has imposed on our esteemed contemporary. As a matter of fact we have not been in- clined to agree with the common estimates which invest the Senator with something like, superhuman powers and make all things possible to him. That he is a shrewd manipulator in polities is true be- yond question. But he is hardly able to do anything that his fancy suggests a:d we believe that if he undertakes to cati- pult his son RICHARD into his senatorial seat he will provoke an opposition too p otential to be overcome. ¢Bertie’’ Adam’s Ignorant Blunder The Hon. ‘‘BERTIE’? ADAMS, easily the most talented Representative in Congress for Philadelphia, made a characteristic ‘*break’’ during the closing hours of the session of Congress which has just drawn to a close. Representative JOHN SHARPE WILLIAMS, of Mississippi, was at the time addressing the House and took JOHN DAL- ZELL to task for the spirit of know noth- ingism expressed in his reference previous- ly to BoURKE COCHRAN’S foreign birth. ‘The gentleman from Penpsylvania’’ he observed, ‘‘who made his eloquent perora- tion tirade last week against foreign born hoodlume, does not live far from the field of Gettysburg. Daring the last war the Sixty-ninth Pennsylvania, ‘Owens Own’ as it was called, was in evidence in defend- ing Pennsylvania soil.”’ This aroused the Hon. ‘‘BERTIE.”’ “Will the gentleman permit me?” he simpered. ‘‘Certainly,’’ replied Mr. WiL- LIAMS. ‘‘Only for a correction.” added the Hon. ‘‘BERTIE.” ‘‘That was the Sixty-ninth New York regiment,” said ‘““BERTIE"’ in conclusion and with a self- satisfied air. ‘It is quoted in this book *‘the Sixty-ninth Pennsylvania,’’ “‘Owen’s Own,’’ responded Mr. WILLIAMS, “and I expect this Federal officer knew what he was talking about,’’ whereupon the Demo- crasio side of the House properly broke out in uproarious applause. Of course the Hon. ‘‘BERTIE’’ was speak- ing in ignorance and made an egregious ass of himself. The regiment which perform- ed such distinguished service at Gettys- burg was the Sixty-ninth Pennsylvania, a Philadelphia organization, and probably a considerable portion of it were residents be- fore their enlistment in the Congress die- trict now misrepresented by the Hon. “BERTIE.”” But what difference is it whether those heroic Irishmen who offered their lives for the preservation of the Union lived in one State or another? The contemptible Know Nothingism expressed by JOHN DALZELL was an insult to the memory of them in any event and the Hon. ‘‘BERTIE'S’’ effort to rob his own State of the distinction which those Irish heroes conferred on it was characteristic of him and his party. ——Aud now A. A. DALE Esq., has an- nounced for the Legislature, that is to say he bas joined forces with Col. JOHN A. DALEY in an effort to see whether the Re- publican party in Centre county has any use for its old wheel horses who were help- ing it fight its fights and bearing its bar- dens long before either WOMELSDORF or KNISELY were heard of. ——The Republican announces JOHN G. LovE, of Bellefonte, as a candidate for President Judge of this district. Let us see—where have we heard that name be- fore? Oh yes, he is the man HARRY WASH- BURN is booming. Tariff Taxes and Prices. Tabor commissioner CARROLL D. WRIGHT has issued a bulletin compar- ing the present prices of necessities with those of the past thirteen years. He in- cludes in his list of articles food-stuffs, clothing, manufactured products and what he calls ‘‘raw commodities'’ which include beans, eggs, milk, rice etc. In food arti- cles the increase in price during the year 1903 amounted to something like fifty per cent. In clothing the inorease is twenty per cent. Manufactured products are higher by twenty-one and a-half per cent., and the raw commodities have increased in price a matter of thirty-three per cent. In metals, which of course includes farm im- plements the increase is thirty per cent. In the matter of fuel and light there was an increase during 1903 amounting to 100 per cent. In the fuel and light class, or as Mr. WRIGHT designates it ‘‘group,’’ there are only two items, anthracite coal and re- fined petroleam. These two products are controlled hy the anthracite coal trust and the Standard oil company. For some time there has been a rather insistent demand for the enforcement of the anti-trust law against these monopolies. A week or so ago the Attorney General admitted the culpability of the anthracite coal trust but added that the evidence against it had been so adroitly concealed that it would be impossible to hold it to account. No effort has been made to compel the Standard oil company to obey the law. In the matter of wages there has been no increase. As a matter of fact commissioner WRIGHT bas not included labor among the commodities considered in his bulletin,but everybody knows that during the year covered by the bulletin the tendency of wages hag been downward, notwithstand- ing the upward trend of the necessaries of life. This fact invites an inquiry as to the effect of a tariff on wages. It is clearly shown by Mr. WRIGHT'S figures that the prices of necessaries of life are increasing waterially under the influence of tariff taxation. That is the protected articles have shown the largest increase. Bus wages have declined regularly so that the earners have not shared in the prosperity of the tariff. Discouraging Report from St. Louis. Former United States Senator CARTER, of Montana, who is now chief of the United States commission at the St. Louis exposi- tion is authority for a statement to the ef- fect that the hotel and boarding house keepers of St. Louis have inaugurated a system of extortion which is more repre- hensible that any kind of robbery that has been indulged in since piracy lost its position as the dominant force on the sea. They charge enormously, Mr. CARTER de- clares, both for lodging and meals, and their inordinate cupidity threatens to de- feat the success of the great enterprise. ‘We sincerely hope that there is no founda- tion in fact for Mr. CARTER’S accusation. The city of St. Louis has been splendidly favored by the press and public in this matter. Congress has supperted the ex- position by appropriations of princely liberality and the newspapers of all sec- tions have urged their readers to attend the show and contribute to its success. But if those who take this advice are to be rob- bed by a lot of avaricions hotel keepers there is likely to be a vast change in the tone of the press within a few days. Asa matter of fact some of the leading papers of the country are already hedging on the subject. Most people who will attend the St. Louis exposition are intelligent searchers after information and knowledge. They realize that the exposition is a vast uui- versity, equipped with much that can be found nowhere else and that every de- partment of it contains object lessons which it will be well for them to learn. Thus believing they will be willing to pay any just charges which may be assessed against them for the advantage they will receive. But they will not stand for extortion and the minute the people of St. Louis begin that there will be a call-off that will be heard from one end of thie broad land to the other. The Wheat Outlook. Four weeks ago had you asked any farmer who came to town what was the outlook for crops he would have answered. ‘‘Not over a half a yield, any place. and in plenty of sections not a fourth of what they should be.” Conditions have materially changed within the past four weeks, and now the promise is that in some sections an ordinary crop of winter grain will be harvested, while in most parts of the county a full half, if not over, is promised. There are farms down the Nittany valley that look as if 30 bushels to the acre would be gathered, but this is about the only section in which a good yield is promised. Elsewhere throughout the county, the fields are spotted—high spots where the snow was blown off and low spots where ice accumu- lated, showing no growth whatever. Eu NO. 19 Gen. Kuropatkin Orders Retreat. Intends to Avoid Battle Until He Has Sufficient Forces to Meet Japs. PARIS, May 9.—The correspondent at St. Petersburg of the Echo de Paris tele- graphs as follows : ‘General Kuropatkin has ordered a gen- eral retreat and no doubt intends to avoid a battle until he bas sufficient forces. He actually has at his disposal not more than 150,000 men, exclusive of the garrison at Port Arthur which consists of 50,000, and the garrison at New Chwang of 15,000. ‘A general who knows the secrets of the mobilization tells me that the last 1000 men making up the required 500,000 will leave Kasen July 1, adding : ‘We will be very sick if the railway is not worked well. It is not likely that General Kuro- patkin will fatigne his troops unnecessari- ly. If the Japanese press him, he will re- tire from Liao Yang to Mukden or even to Harbin. Retreat certainly is painful, but it is now indispensable.”’ RUSSIANS WILL LEAVE SUFFICIENT GUARD TO PREVENT PILLAGING. SHAN HAl KwAN, May 9.—(6:30 p. m. )—The evacuation of New Chwang con- tinues. The Russian authorities have promised to leave a sufficient rear guard to prevent pillaging by Chinese bandits who are in the vicinity and awaiting an oppor- tunity to get into the city. Nothing farther has been heard of the Japanese transports which were seen re- cently near Kia Chau. The Russians are commandering cattle on the west side of the Liao river, and the Chinese are indignant at this procedure. A Japanese spy bas been discovered at New Chwang. He was approached by the Russians, who pulled at his cue, which came off. He was taken prisoner, but sab- sequently escaped with the help of some Chinese, who distracted the attention of the Russians. REINFORCEMENTS FOR GEN. KUROPATKIN., St. PETERSBURG, May 9.—7:45 p. m.— The reinforcements prepared for General Kuropatkin are being hurried. The last statement of the mobilization of the Tenth and Seventeenth army corps has been sig- nalized by the calling out of the reserves in the Moscow and Kharkoff provinces. They will go to the front, thus placing another 100,000 men at Kuropatkin’s dis- posal. The announcement of the mobilization of four army corps along the Volga, which will follow in July or August, is expected next month. The reserves of each army corps involve about 20,000 men, an army corps in times of peace numbering 20,000 men and in war time, 50,000. An army corps on a war footing includes three in- fantry divisions of four regiments each of three battalions ; a division of cavalry, consisting of three regiments of six squad- rons each ; one Cossack regiment, adorigade of field artillery and also three detachments of engineers and sappers. By the departure of these troops, the Russian European army will be six out of thirty-one army corps. The previous drafts of troops from Enropean Russia, has heen formed into Siberian rifle battalions, with- out changing the organization of the Em- peror’s force on this side of the Urals. The present units will be transferred bodily to Manchuria, retaining their present officers and staffs. A Big Coal Deal Closed. The Beech Creek Coal and Coke Co. Merged With the Pennsylvania Coal and Coke Co. / Official announcement has been made of a gigantio coal deal, involving nearly $12,- 000,000 of capital, by which the Pennsyl- vania Coal and Coke Co. become the pur- chaser of the Beech Creek Coal and Coke Co., which has been more or less closely identified with New York Central inter- ests. Negotiations for the purchase bave been pending for a long time, but were not consummated until Thursday, when the formal transfer papers were signed. In making the announcement, president W. A. Lathrop of the Pennsylvania Coal and Coke Co. said that there would be no ohanges in the personnel of the two cor- porations and that James Kerr would con- tinue as president of the Beech Creek Co. The deal is of more than usual interest be- cause the Pennsylvania Co. has principally used the tracks of the Pennsylvania rail- road, while the Beech Creek Co. has ship- ped over those of the New York Central. Their consolidation now indicates the har- monious relations of these two great com- panies in the soft coal regions of this State. Through the addition of the Beech Creek Co. the Pennsylvania Coal and Coke Co. now controls upward of 117,000 acres of coal and surface, chiefly in Blair, Cambria, Clearfield and Indiana counties, containing upwards of 1,000,000,000 tons of coal. Up- on these lands are located 44 operating col- lieries, with a daily shipping capacity of 25,000 tons. In addition the company owns 1,100 coke uvens, 1,200 houses, 1,000 railroad cars and numerous electric light and water companies at various points throughout the region. The company also controls the Hooverhurst and Southwestern raiiroad and the North River Coal and Wharf Co., with docks at Port Liberty, in New York harbor. Upon the completion of the merger the total honds of both com- panies outstanding will amount to $11,- 302,000. By securing the Beech Creek properties the Pennsylvania Coal and Coke Co. be- comes the largest bolder of soft coal lands in the country, and with the future devel- opment of its lands is ultimately destined to become the largest producer. Under the new deal its officers are: President, W. A, Lathrop; vice presidents, T. H. Watkineand C. D. Simpson, of Scranton; directors, R. H. Williams, 8S. T. Peters, H. G. Lloyd, Robert Mitchell, Jas. Kerr and A. E. Patton. It is Seo. From the Danville Intelligencer. In a speech on the tariff on Monday, Senator Bacon proved that our sewing ma- chines, sold for $15 in England cost $25 in this country, and that American steel rails could he hought $5 a ton cheaper in Eng- land than in Pennsylvania or Alabama. ham re Hd Spawls from the Keystone. —Beezer Bros., of Clearfield, have pur- chased the old Mansion house site in that place and it is said will erect thereon a five- story hotel. —The Sunbury water company has ‘begun Three million gallons of sand-filtered water daily. celluloid collar worn by a colored youth named Fisher, who resides in Johnstown, and before it could be torn off the lad’s neck had been quite severely burned. Results might have been worse but for a passer-by, who aided the frightened boy in )stting rid of his hot collar. —The DuBois Printing and Publishing company will about the middle of this month launch another morning daily paper. The company is incorporated and will use a telegraph service. The paper will float un- der the name of the Morning Journal and the publishers will make an effort to have it brimful of the latest news. : —The Pennsylvania railroad has awarded the contract for the construction of seven miles of track on the Possum Glory branch of the Cherry Tree and Dixonville railroad to Charles A. Sims. The new line is an ex- tension and will run from Two Lick creek to Yellow Lick creek, in Indiana county. The line is being jointly constructed by the Penn-’ sylvania and Vanderbilt interests. —Charles A. Hess, of Lewisburg, had a portion of a needle removed from his arm this week, which became imbedded in the flesh when he was a babe, 35 years ago. It could not be located then. It moved back and forth, and recently the arm became sore. The surgeon had trouble in finding the needle, for even after freezing the arm and making an incision, it moved about as though it were alive. —P. A. Strand, a man of about 60 years, living at the settlement called Little Sweden, near Peale, while despondent from drinking, retired Tuesday night, not to rest, but for the purpose of taking his own life. He ac- complished this end by putting a dynamite cap in his mouth, which exploded and blew his head off. A wife and family survive. He was buried on Thursday. Another warn- ing of the consequences of drink. —The Presbyterian church of the borough of Indiana have concluded to erect a new church on the site now occupied by the old one. At a congregational meeting held at the close of Sunday morning’s service the building committee and trustees were author- ized to let the contract. As soon as the con- tract is let steps will be taken to remove the old and make ready for the new. The esti- mated cost of building and furnishing is $65,000 of which a little over $28,000 is pledged. —Retrenchent orders are being put into force on the New York Central railroad, but the Pennsylvania division will not suffer a great deal. Several yard clerks, however, have been laid off at Jersey Shore and in the motive power department division Supt. Walton will cut his pay roll $2,000 a month. The Oak Grove shops will not be affected by the order, but eight laborers in the junction car shops were dismissed. The remainder of the curtail will be made at various places along the division. —Friday afternoon last officer Bathurst, of Huntingdon, arrested in that town several lads between the ages of 14 and 18 years who were pitching pennies for keep. They were taken before mayor Petrikin, where a se- vere reprimand was administered, giving them to understand that a recurrence of the crime would mean thirty days imprison- ment and $10 fine. Officer Bathurst and opinion of persons of sound ethics; but how about the boys who shoot marbles for keep ? —The canceling machine in the World's Fair post office was put into operation Tues- day, and the first letter to be canceled was addressed to President Francis, from Farren Zerbe, of Tyrone, chief of the souvenir coin department. The envelope bore a three-cent stamp designed especially for the Philadel- phia Centennial, in 1876; a two-cent stamp of the Trans-Mississippi Exposition at Oma- ha in 1898; a two-cent stamp of the Pan American Exposition at Buffalo in 1901, and the Lonisiana Purchase Exposition stamp of 1904. —Mrs. Sherman Jamison was released from the Clinton county jail Monday after- noon. Sheriff Shearer secured some clothing for the woman and her two children, Wil- iiam and Harry Thomas, purchased railroad tickets for them to Huling’s tower, their former home, and put them on the 3:40 afternoon train. The trio were loath to go as the sheriff and his wife had treated them during their stay more kindly than they had ever known before, but as there were no legal grounds for holding them longer it was thought best to discharge them from custo- dy. —Desperately wounded by the fangs of a mad dog and intent upon saving members of her family from similar misfortune, Mrs. Da- vid Keckler, living near Waynesboro, Frank- lin county, struggled with and conquered the animal on Saturday. Mrs. Keckler’s dog had been away for several days and re- turned Saturday afternoon, barking and snapping at objects and giving all evidence of being mad. Suddenly it sprang at Mrs. Keckler and bit her hand, its teeth sinking deep into her flesh. With remarkable nerve she caught the dog and forced him into a summer house and imprisoned him there so that he could not hurt others. The woman was taken to Baltimore for treatment. —The Liberty bell will be taken to St. Louis. This was decided upon Thursday when both branches of the city councils of Philadelphia passed a resolution appointing a special joint committee of 24 to escort the revolutionary relic, and appropriating $15,- 000 to defray the expenses. The start will’ be made early in June, but before the old bell is placed in the Pennsylvania building at the World’s Fair it will have passed through the principal cities of the Louisiana territory. The bell will remain at St. Louis until the close of the exposition, and will be under a constant guard of Philadelphia po- licemen. President Francis, of the exposi- tion, will be asked to name a special day to be known as ‘Liberty Bell Day.” a filtration plant for their local service, mayor Petrikin were entirely right in the" will be supplied the residents of that town —While burning brush a spark ignited a :