BY P. GRAY MEEK. ETE a — Ink Slings. —It is evidently a very bad combina- tion, those three lawyers and two gentle- men of leisure. —The men who run the pool rooms in Philadelphia are being punished very severely for their nefarious business. —Ten years is a long time for a man to hold office, particularly when that man has been guilty of trying to use the office asa political sinecure. —ELLis L. OrvIS has never been a politician, nor aspired to party leadership, therefor he would make a much safer Judge than a man who has. —GEORGE E. LAMB isa very nice fel- low but his ability as a drink-mixer doesn’t qualify him for the office of Pro- thonotary. —The United States pays nearly a mil- lion dollars a day to foreign ships, for carry- ing its products, yet there are those who say Republican administrations are all they should be. ' —The completion of the south Water street walk is convincing the public that the WATCHMAN was right when it urged council to lay stone on north Water street, instead of granolithic. —With the Republicans fighting the way they are in Delaware and Wisconsin it is next to a certainty that two heretofore doubtful States will have to be moved over into the Democratic column. _—If there were no other reason for it we would still be justified in demanding Judge LOVE'S retirement on the sole ground of his political activities. But there are many other reasons. —TFortunately for Bellefonte it wkiss few lawyers, contractors, and gentlémen of leisure who are not afraid to put some money into enterprises to keep the old town from getting the dry rot. . —In Japan they don’t have fences around their farms because [they take up too much of the ground. In the United States many farmers don’t have fences, but it is pringipally because they don’t have the boards or wire. ; © —Few as the political Judges are in Pennsylvania there are too many go long as there is one left. ‘L'hbey should be promps- - ly retired. No district can hope to have an honorable, a dignified ora usefal benoh ‘with a political judge. —While praying at the grave of a. rela tiveina Brooklyn cemetery ‘a few days ago a Polish girl was killed by ‘the tombstone falling ‘over on her. What a suspense woald ‘be ended if there were only ‘som way of Angling ont what she said in the prayer. © is AA eas Riad 9 —It is =aid that the most remarkable | prisoner in the United States is the editor of the Star of Hope, the prison paper pub- lished in Sing Sing. He is there for bnrg- lary and bas been a lawyer, reporter, ‘con- fidence man, secretary to a Khedive of Egypt, preacher, forger and politician. It is not stated wl ether he followed the latter profession in Philadelphia or not. ARTHUR KIMPORT is ons in his can- vass to work until the polls close. It ought not to be necessary for him to do a bit of campaigning, when he has every qualification for the office and his oppo- nent none. He is taking no chances, how- ever, and will call on everyone possible in order that he may personally solicit sup- port. His reputation is known all over the county, even better than he is himself and “it seems as if campaigning ought to be a very pleasant job for him. —In the Century Magazine for February, 1888, THEODORE ROOSEVELT said of the wild cowboys of the West: ‘‘They are much better fellows and pleasanter com- panions than farmers or agricultural labor- ers, nor are the mechanics and workmen of a city to be mentioned in the same breath.”” What will the farmers, agricul- tural laborers, mechanics and workmen of Centre county think of this when they come to vote on Nov. 8th. Possibly they will tell Mr. ROOSEVELT to go and get the cowboys to vote for him. —The question that many are asking themselves now is : What motive could Judge LovE have bad in granting a license to HARRY WASHBURN, a man who bad | been a resident of the county scarcely more than a few months before he applied for li- cense. WASHBURN bad become notorious asa hotel keeper in Clearfield county and when it became apparent that he could not get license there any more he sold out and moved over into Centre, where Judge Love granted his first application, not- withstanding the fact tbat hundreds of well-to-do, respectable and responsible men who have been life-long residents of Centre county have been rejected by Judge LovE. —With only a littie more than three weeks for the finish of the campaign there appears to be a lack of aggressive work on the surface in Centre county. This does not indicate an indifference on the part of the voters, however. In fact, it is quite the reverse. In all the history of local political contests we bave never known of deeper thinking about an election. The ticket is such an important one to us all. that even the excitement of a presidential year has been utterly unable to eclipse it. The people are especially cognizant of the fact that men, more than party principles, are to be weighed in this campaign and they are going deep into the records of all of them and will vote accordingly, with- ont making any ado about it. “VOL. 49 STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., OCT. 14, 1904. No Claim for Support. The people of this Congress district are at present investigating the claims of SoroMON R. DRESSER, of Bradford, for re- election as Representative and the result is not likely to be satisfactory to Mr. DRESS- ER. He was born in Michigan and came into Pennsylvania after he had reached the age of maturity and located in the oil region.: There heacquired title to a patent device invented by another, according to common report, and ‘‘has developed a large business, ’’ the biographical section of the Congressional Directory informs us. What is meant by that is that he has accumulated a large fortune which ‘enabled him to buy a congressional nomination when the late Senator QUAY was dealing in that sort of commodities. But the closest scrutiny fails to reveal anything that Mr. DRESSER has ever done for the people of this Congress district. ‘We venture to declare that before his nomi- nation for the office two years ago less than a score of the citizens of Centre county had ever heard of him and that up until the present time no man can pein$ ouf a single heneficence he “has ever bestowed on any citizen of the county outside of some ap- pointments which he has since caused to be made, not with the idea of conserving the interests of ‘the people hut in order to promote his own political interests and personal aggrandizement. His demand for another election is a piece of impudent assurance. Instead of popular approval he deserves a severe rebuke. This district is composed of Cameron, Centre, Clearfield and McKean counties. The « interests of Centre, Clearfield and Carieron counties are analagous. They are essentially Pennsylvania communities and the combined population of them is, according to the census of 1900, 130,556. McKean which is ‘barely linked to the two populous counties of Centre and Clearfield by touching Cameron which in turn only touches arfield, has a population of 51,- 343 and is as widely separated trom the other counties in: character, industry aud disposition of the ‘people, as il it were at- tached to the extrem en ud of the State in which Mr. DRESSER was born, Michigan. and that. A {= The; peofle Job Carre: county owe it to Congress who is in closer relationship to them than Mr. DRESSER. If he were con- spicuously fit for the office the difference between his interests and those of this county, might be over-looked. If he were a statesman whose broadened intellect gave bim a knowledge of the wants of all the people, his environment might be over- locked. Bat as a matter of fact he has no such claim on the consideration of the peo- ple. He was rich enough to buy one nomi- nation and election and the people should teach him that if he had the purse of CROESUS he can’t get another election by the same process. The Wisconsin Comedy. The decision of the Supreme court of | Wisconsin affirming the regularity of the LAFoLrTTE faction of the Republican party puts the President, as well as the Republi- can National committee, in an anomalous position. Before that event the committee declared that Wisconsin was absolutely certain to elect ROOSEVELT electors any- way. After the event it was announced that the decision made the State certain for ROOSEVELT because the SPOONER fac- tion would acquiesce, whereas if the deci- sion had been the other way the Democrats would bave carried the State becanse the LAFoOLETTE faction would have kept up the fight. Now it transpires that the SPOONER faction intends to keep up the fight. : But. that isn’t the most embarrassing consequence of the decision. The: fight against LAFOLETTE is a corporation fight and SPOONER represented the corporations in it. /Becanse of corporation opposition to LAFOLETTE, SPOONER induced the Presi- dent and the Republican National com- | mittee. to enter the conflict in opposition to LAFOLEITE and in obedience to the wishes of the corporations the President ordered the Republican National econven- tion to refuse the LAFOLETTE delegates, whom the decision declares were elected, admission to the convention. The deci- sion, therefore reverses the President and arms LAFOLETTE with a just canse of war agaiust the President and the SPOONER faction. Under these circumstances there can’t be the shadow of a doubt as to the result of the election in that State. SPOONER must keep up his fight against LAFOLETTE or jose his job as counsel for the corpora- tions. If hie keeps up his fight LAFOLETTE will retaliate by fighting ROOSEVELT and with the party thus divided it is safe to predict that the Democratic electors will bave not less than 50,000 majority while the elestion of the Democratic candidate for Governor is made equally certain. ‘Al- together it is an interesting situation. The latest development’ was the recogni- tion of the LaFolette State committee by the National organization. But LAFo- LETTE now demands an apology for delay. ere is no imgeruity between this spunty themselves fo select a Representative in Mr. Cortelyoun’s Gall. Mr. GEORGE B. CORTELYOU, chairman of the Republican National committee, is said to have given President ROOSEVELT ostentatious assurance the other day that no promise has been made or pledge given to any corporation in consideration of cam- paign subscriptions. What a supreme exhibition of gall ! Mr. CoRTELYOU had been for nearly two years before his appointment as chairman of Republican National commit- tee, head of the Department of Commerce. In that position he has been able to ac- quire the secrets of all the so-called ‘‘com- binations in restraint of trade.’’ Possess- ed of those secrets he has gone to the cor- porations and demanded whatever he wanted of them and they had no recourse but to comply. It isthe most inignitous exhibition of governmental robbery in the history of the world. When a western bandit holds up a train and with a pistol at the head of a passenger demands his money, he doesn’t have to explain what he proposes to do with the spoils or what may happen if the request is not complied with. That is entirely obvious to the victim. The bandit isn’t there for fun and the pistol isn’t anything | like an olive branch expressing sentiments of fraternity. The victim knows that he | must pay or be murdered. The handit has taken chances which are multiplied in hazard if he doesn’t succeed. Mr. CORTEL- | YOU occupied precisely the same position. Morally he is on exactly the same plane. Both are dastardly criminals and ready to | go to the same extremes. If CORTELYOU | were driven by Decessity he would prompt- | ly take the place of “ESSE JAMES and is! morally as guilty as that outlaw. 151 But he thinke be can fool the people by his declaration to the President that there bas been no coercion in his preditory raid on the corporations. A political mercenary without principles of character, a man who isa Demooras or Republican accordingly, as one or the other party contributes to his Ambition, has the impudence $0 assume that his word will be taken in the face of such’ averwhelming evidence to the contrary as the circumstances present. On his oath no intelligent man would believe such a tale in view of thie facts and tnder no cumstances would he bave been able to put corporations under tribute and bleed them as he has in this matter. Therefore, he in- sults the intelligence of the people when he declares that no pledges have been made. Everybody knows that he has mortgaged the administration to the limit. ——Ot all the balder-dash that has ever been heard of none surpasses the shallow argument of the LOVE people to the effect that Mr. Orvis, heing interested in much litigation in Centre county, would have to call in outside Judges to try many cases, should he be elevated to the bench. Mr. ORVIS is a prominent attorney, of course. If he were not he would not now be a candidate for Judge. But wasn’t this same Judge LOVE a prominent attorney ten years ago and hasn’t he had Jodges WHITE, BELL, ARCHIBALD, MCCLURE, GORDON, and others here to try cases for him. But the people of Centre county are not concerned about that little matter just now. What they want isa man who will be a jndge—reasonable, impartial and not a petty politician. John Noll's Candidacy. The drift of sentiment seems to be strong for JouN NOLL for the Legislature. Every- one realizes that Mr. KEPLER ought to he sent back to Harrisburg because he can he of so much more’ use this year than he was in the last session and it is being gen- erally agreed that Mr. NoLL is the right man to send with him. The reasons are many. * Inthe first place’ a more conservative, better balanced more dignified gentleman would be hard to find. As asoldier of she Civil war his record stands without a blem- ish. He was never away from duty, either by leave or sickness, and draws no pension. He has beena bard. working, honorable ‘citizen who knows the needs of the masses and has the back bone to stand up for ‘ them, and he is a representative of a large and useful Centre county family. His opponents are not the choice of the Repub- licans of the county. They were forced on the ticket against the wishes of many who recognized in Messrs DALE and DALEY men who ‘had ‘more claim to the nomination. Mr. KNISELY’S candidacy can be looked upon as scarcely more than a joke, while that of WOMELSDORF is the resuit of an apparent attempt to give the friends of the late Governor: HASTINGS a slap in the face. Mr. NoLL once before sought the pre- ferment of the voters of Centre county. At that time he was unsuccessful in his at- tempt, but since then there bas heen a growing feeling that a great injustice was done him and on all sides we hear the opinion that now is the : Sime: ‘to make amends. j end other oir- | ~ Making Senator Hill Popular. Our Republican contemporaries are ex- ceedingly bitter against the Hon. DAVID B. Hirn of New York. That gentleman is not deporting himself in the presens campaign according to their potions of propriety. He is abusing ROOSEVELT they say,wout of all reason. For example in a speech delivered in Baltimore, the other evening, he actually declared that in the appointment of his private secretary to an office which revealed all the secrets of the trusts to-him and subsequently designating him, armed with such secrets, to the chair- manship of the Republican National com- mittee, the President simply made Cor- TELYOU a sort of a highwayman, and him- gelf the custodian of the spoils obtained in his predatory operations. Our esteemed Republican contempor- aries forget that in this age of reason and era. of intelligence, men are loved for the enemies they make and that in the antip- athy they are revealing against Senator HILL, they are making him extremely pop- plar among ‘the decent and fairminded people of the country. We. will not he copstrued as enemies of ' Senator (HILL when we say that he was nob popular among a class of ‘citizens of ‘the country whose good: opinions are - ‘highly prized im public. life. We have not shared this enmity against the Senator. He is a skil- | tal Politician and a tireless and efficient party leader. But he bas never used politics for personal gain oy his integrity has never heén Bat for some ‘reason he has been un- popular smong those reputable people who are averse to practical polities. Oar Re- publican contemporaries are rapidly and certainly removing this prejudice, how- ever. They are assailing the New York statesman without reason, and that sort of thing naturally and inevitably enlists ‘sympathy for the man thus vilified. For ‘example, there is ‘no justice in atbacking him hecanse he tells the truth about ROOSEVELT and none of them has attempt- «ed to prove that what ‘he has said about the President is not the truth. At least what he said in his Baltimore speech the 3 night is ‘the trath and nothing but | truth. CORTELYOU’S connection bh the _ robbery of . the ‘trusts. for, not of. the “campaign | fand is a scandal which cannot be too sev- erely condemned and if Senator HILL most nearly puts upon it the just and adequate condemnation, he will be praised rather than blamed. Our contemporaries have ‘*o’ershot the mark.’ ——‘‘Seeing is believing,’ so they: say, but if anyone bad told us that Col. JoHN A. DALEY would be the main pillar at the rally for LovE, WOMELSDORF AND KNISE- LY, held here last Thursday nigh, prior to our seeing him in that position, we would have told them they didn’t know how much back-bone the Colonel possessed. In the light of such a recent event, however, we are forced to acknowledge that we were the ignorant in this case. We Want Tariff Not Robbery. The hysterical efforts of some of the Re- publican newspapers and orators to make the public believe that Democratic success in the coming presidential election will re- sult in absolute free trade would be amus- ing if they were not insulting. Anyone fit to remain outside of an insane asylum must know that there is no possible chance of putting this country on a free trade basis if there were any desire to compass such a result and that as a matter of fact there is no such desire among the Democrats. That there will be a modification of the tariff rates io the event of Democratic snocess is, we hope and believe, true. But nothing more than that ie contemplated or desir- ed. THOMAS JEFFERSON was the author of the first tariff law enacted in this country, the purpose being, as he said, to raise reve- nue and, incidentally, to protect infant in- dustries. The tariff which he proposed amounted to about three per cent. and ALEXANDER HAMILTON, who was classed as a protectionist, expressed the belief that that was ample. Ever singeethat the Dem- ocratic plan of raising revenue was by reasonable tariff taxation and as a matier of fact, during the entire sixty years in which the Democratic party governed the country, all the revenues were raised in that way, and tariff for revenue has been a slogan of the Democracy always. It is a ruling idea of Democratic statesmanship. The present tariff is not for the purpose of raising revenue, however, or even of pro- tecting infant industries. It is for the por- pose of creating monopolies, fostering trusts and conferring special favors on political favorites. The constitution of the United States authorizes a tariff for revenue, but not such robbery of the people as enables. the steel truss to charge home customers ten dollars a ton more for steel billets than for-| eign customers are asked to pay, thus giv- ing the foreign manufacturer a vast advan- tage over the home producer in the markets. of the world, That is what the Republi- cans are doing and that is what the Demo- cratio platform denounces as robbery. { NO. 40. How A Republican Trust Prospers It Working Men. From the New York American. This is the way one Trust does business. As the Joliet (IIl.) ;plant - of the United States Steel Company there has been a ‘‘readjustment.” The wages of all the 4000 men employed have been cub. In many cases the decrease amounts to 50 per cent. . Skilled workmen who have been earning $3600 a year, laboring eight hours a day, have had their wages cut to $2400, and to earn this they must work twelve hours a day. Expert heaters in ghe billet mills have been given an additional farnace to watch and their salaries have been cut frop $2500 to $900 a year. In a department known as the converter wages have been cut 35 per cent. the num, ber of men has been reduced and the work- ing hours have been increased. Prior the ‘readjustment’ . fifteen men were & work at the ingot furnaces. Under +t ‘‘readjustment’’ nine men do the work. 1 . Old men will give way to young men. The plant gets (the same amount finished product since as before the ‘‘read- jussmens.”’ . This is .done by increasing work. If they quit they cannot work at their trade in amy. other plant, because the Steel Trust controls all the great iron manufacturing plants. { There is no competition at home. The. tariff.outs out the competition from abroad. Protected by a high tariff, the Trust dispense with skilled; men at high mage And make othermen do their work. e product may not be 20 gnod, but the bu) er ‘has no other source of supply. This is how a trust treats its employes. ¥ What Rooseveltism Stands for. . x From the New York Herald. ' Republican partisans, of course, ol; im shat Mr. Roosevelt’s ' elestion is tial to national prosperity. Indepen¢ and self-respecting voters, however, Ww demand far better reasons for this add cious assertion than any that his defends have yet begun to give. £ It will be impossible to convince the thinking masses, who control all elecsit that the country can. profit by contingin the policies of an immensely costly {am- 'perialism. An extravagant militarism Personal government. Enormous | : ‘excessive tariff taxation. Fabulous g ernment expenditures. | A revival of ‘distracting race issue. A parbnershi ‘the government with monopolies: and ‘less trusts. ‘And the prastiéntion ‘eivil service to political ends, the hours and. making each man do more; The men must: accept the cut or quit. 15s | ud sustained to some of the groups Lamar, are now agi : co-operative railroad through Sugar val- ley. —The people of Carroltown are now s0 re- duced for water that they are “allowed only ‘one tubful a day to the family by the water authorities, —A slight fire in the stable of Thomas J . Calaban, early Tuesday morning, smothered two horses, one a racing pacer “Billy H,” ‘| with a record of 2:20. —Windber was the scene of a stabbing af- fray on Sunday in which one Italian badly injured another. The probable murderer was arrested in Johnstown the next day. —Fred Hager and William Brotz have been arrested and locked up on the charge of brutally beating Mrs. David Dishong, an aged resident of Morrellville, Cambria coun- ty. —Clinton county’s new railroad town, Oak Grove, will have a weekly newspaper in the near future, so it is reported. An up-to- date job office will be connected with the en- terprise. —Rumor fays that alliior Welch, of the Mount Union Times who was defeated for the state senatorial nomination in the Hunting- don-Franklin district, wants to be made state treasurer. —Members of the Twelfth regiment who served in the Spanish-American’ war, will hold their sixth anniversary at Milton on October 20th. Special rates have been se- cured and all members of this regiment are cordially invited to attend. . —Michael O’Mally, a resident of Cameron, ‘Was killed Saturday morning shortly after 3 0'¢ k by being struck with a locomotive of {: ght train, No. 92. The man was 29 years and was employed as fireman at the coke juse below Cameron. —After winning two straight heats in the 2:14 race on the York track last week and leading i in the third by twenty feet, Lyman | Reedman, of Baltimore, driver of Noah B., -owned. by Thomas Buckley, of Arlington, Md., fell dead from his sulky to the track. —Chester county Republicans are worried | over the fact that the Quakers of that county refuse to. vote for Roosevelt because of the insult offered them in one of the President's books, and fear that hundreds of them will remain at home on election day in conse- | quence. —Mabel, the two-year-old daughter of .Anzi Transue, of Scott Run, Monroe county, swallowed six morphine pills, thinking they ‘| were candy. Almost immediately the moth- ‘er, who was visiting a neighbor, returned ‘| and found her baby unconscious, and fter applying ‘remedies the child’s lite was “| saved. —Two ‘huge pumpkins, estimated io weigh 500 pounds each, are the pride ‘grower, William Eppley, of Newber " York county. If he had been nominated for sheriff by the Democrats, as he hoped, he would have had a piece of pumpkin pie for ® | every Democrat in the aunty, fom these " two vegetables. | —Unless there are some oljestions filed 3 of elect-- - Harder still will'it be for ‘ers to comprehend how Si e:nation’s peace. 5 As the antithesis of all that’ would con flict with the restoration of good feeling, the calm and judicial ‘campaign of Judge Parker is bright and big with promise for the country, now sick of the ceaseless and distracting agitations inseparable from an imperialistic regime. * For this reason, if for no other, the business interests of the nation may look forward hopefully to the coming election. of / ‘A Presidential High-Roller. From the New York World. The Roosevelt administration bas ac- quired the distinction of being the most expensive in our history. The second administration . of Madison, including the war of 1812, cost $130,543,- 763. The administration of Polk, inclading the Mexican war cost $173,299,266. The administration of Lincoln, includ- ing the Civil war, cost $3,347,802,909 in paper money, equivalent to from $1,500,- 000,000 to $2,000,000,000 in gold. The first administration of McKinley, including the Spanish and Philippine wars, cost $1,906,126,611. The administrasion of Roosevelt in an unbroken peace has cost $2,449,228,545 in gold. That is nearly four times as mush as was spent under the scandalous first ad- ministration of Grant, and three times the cost of the first administration of Cleve- land. President Roosevelt certainly comes high. Must we really have him ? The Costiveness of It. From the Johnstown Democrat. It has cost the people of the United States $81.25 per Filipino head to sell the Filip- inos 60 cents worth of American goods per capita a year—or just 5 cents’ worth a month. And this is what imperial expan- sion has done for trade ! # Parker mot to Tour, NEW YORK, Oot. 7.—Chairman Taggart at Democratic national headquarters gave out the following statement : ‘‘Shortly after his nomination Judge ‘Parker set about the consideration of his course of action toward the conduct of the campaign. He consulted many men of large experience in such matters and made an examination of the course of every suc- cessful candidate. That done. he decided, as it was necessary for him to do, what his course should be, and he caused that de- cision to be made generally known. It was to the effect that he would not go upon deem it desirable to make could be made at Rosemount, following in that respect the McKinley precedent of 1896. ‘That decision made and announced, he proceeded to work along the lines he had marked out for himself. He believed then, as he helieves now. thai be decided right- ly, and no amount of entreating would budge him. His record during all his life proves that clamor will not move him one iota. The incident is closed, and those in charge of the campaign fully approve of the determination of Judge Parker.” Judge Parker bas been importuned to speak in various states, and this announce-, the stump; that such speeches as he should | ors, the ballot to be voted next November ill be nine columns wide, with the follow- "hibitionist, Socialist, Socialist Labor, Inde: pendent, Citizens, Roosevelt- -Fairbanks, Pro- tectionist and one blank, —Carrying a naked lamp into one of the old workings of Mount Jessup colliery, near ‘Peckville, Paul Skovera caused an explosion ‘of gas which caught a dozen men at work in ‘the shaft, resulting in the death of himself ‘and John Manoski and the serious burning of nine others. Five of the others are so badly injured that their recovery is doubtful. ; ~—Last Saturday the Clinton county com- | missioners purchased of the Owego bridge company the superstructure for an 86 foot bridge with a 12 foot roadway to span Fish- ing creek near Sanderson’s mill, ‘in Bald ‘Eagle township. The purchase of this bridge was recommended by the last grand jury. Monday the commissioners and their clerk were on the site of the new bridge con- ferring with the supervisors of Bald Eagle township who will be expected to construct | the abutments for the new structure. —During the past ten or twelve days not less than five big black bears have been run down and slaughtered on the mountains sur- rounding Sugar valley. This indicates, says the Journal, that wild “‘critters’ of this kind are rather plenty in these neck o’ woods. At the head of the class stands Jobn Rubi. He killed the first two bears below Tylersville. | Next is A. D. Kleckner, who shot one near his camp, north of Loganton. Then follows Samuel Matter and John Cooper, credited with having trapped a 150 pounder in | Spruce hollow. Last but not least appear Newton Snook and John Feidler, strong and brave, having killed their game with clubs and stone, along Cherry run, after a long and hard fight. —About 4 o'clock last Friday afternoon Mrs. F. H. Gallagher, of Reynoldsville, ‘ went to the hen house to look for eggs. She stepped upon a high cross piece to look into a nest, says the Star, and then stepped off be- fore letting go of the upper shelf with her left hand and after her feet were off the cross piece a ring® on her hand caught on a nail and the weight of her hody stripped all the flesh off her finger down to the first joint and the end of the finger was torn off at the first joint. Mrs. Gallagher was alone at the time and she picked up the piece of finger and walked up through the lot and across the street to a neighbor’s to get them to send for a doctor. The doctors amputated the re- mainder of the finger above the second Joint. —A couple weeks ago D, Scott Currin, of Loganton, sold his printing office and at the time wrote that ‘‘God only knew what he would do now.” Mr. Currin is back in the harness again and has sent out the following notice : ‘‘After two weeks have passed and a lot of unpleasant experiences we find our- selves back again at the editorial tripod. That man W. F. Seibert, with whom we had entered into articles of agreement for the sale of the Sugar Valley Journal printing office, is a miserable failure, having betrayed the confidence we had entrusted to him,and then iugidiously sneaked away to parts unknown, forfeiting all right and claim to the deal. Probably it is better for us and also the ‘went is designed to prevent further Similar requests. Journal that he did pull out, as he is no good aud the town is well rid of him." ig groups: Republican, Democratic; Pro- ~~