Spawls from the Keystone. —Barnum’s circus is scheduled for Hunt- ingdon May 27th. —The Clearfield county home is now crowd- ed to. its utmost capacity, there being 167 inmates. i —W. F. Eckbert, Jr., took charge of the Lewistown postoffico on the first of March, G. F. Stackpole retiring. —Huntingdonians have already subscribed Bemorrai tn GRAY MEEK. 8yY P. Ink Slings. . —The ground hog is no longer the rul- ing passion. —Lent has begun. Many will negotiate yp $175 as a starter of a fund for a rousing 4th a loan of a little piety during the next six = se = ) Gr of July celebration this year. weeks. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL: UNION. hf —The farmers about Somerset and through- out that county are preparing to harvest an enormous crop of maple sugar this spring. —H. A. Heimer, a Jersey Shore restaurant keeper, has disappeared after murderously assaulting his wife and four-years’ old son. —May 22nd is the date set for the meeting, —Mr. RIGHTNOUR didn’ do so bad last year. His bills of costs to the connty amounted to $1079.34. —If ideas were selling at ten dollars each, there are statesmen we know of who NO. 10. But Will He Do So? “VOL. 50_ Fraud in Philadelphia. — BELLEFONTE, PA., MAR. 10, 1905. One Grave Charge Proven. Roosevelt's Innugural Address. President ROOSEVELT’S inaugural ad- The Philadelphia Committee of Seventy | During the recent campaign for Presi- From the Pittsburg Post. couldn’t earn ten cents in a whole year. —The millennium must be coming, sure enough, for we are having ‘‘wars and ru- mors of wars’’ ——in the various churches —The Japs are not following benevolent assimilation lines, just exactly, but they are doing sometbing very like the Ameri- can idea of it to the Russians. —The liverymen of the county will look hard at the item in the county statement t hat gives commissiener JOHN G. BAILEY have a cinch if the Japanese were to com- mission it to publish the history that the Island Empire has made within the last —Instead of,following the usmal custom of Vice Presidents ‘Mr. FAIRBANKS will probably not permit himself tc be laid on the shelf. He will insist on being put into the 1efrigerator. —1It is ‘said that the cotton factories in Lancaster, England, spin enough thread in six seconds to reach around the world. The loafers in most any country store spin enough yarns in the same time to reach to —Last year the Gazetle drew $887.10 from the county treasury for printing. It was more than all the other printers and publishers in the county, combined, re- ceived. You can always count —The fine sarcasm in *‘Colonel’”’ JAMES W. SWEELEY’S Williamsport Sun relative to the chairman of the Pennsylvania Democ- racy leadsms to wonderment as to wheth- er the ‘“‘Colonel’”” would like to have the job for himself. . —If itis true that a syndicate has been formed for the purpose of importing pack- ages of earth from Palestine to be sold in this country as souvenirs it will not be has already unearthed a conspiracy to de- fraud the election in the Thirteenth ward of that city and arrested an entire election board and some outsiders, includine the clerk of one of the committees of coun- cil. The charge is, and evidence appears to be conclusive, that before the opening of the polls in that election division, 200 votes had been deposited in the ballot box. That is precisely the method adopted by SAMUEL SALTER .in the Eleventh. ward some years ago which made him a fugitive from justice until after the present Mayor ance of the prosecuting officer escaped pun- ishment and has since been enjoying a lu- crative and important office. In the case in question, in which it may be predicted that there will be no convic- tion for the reason that the frauds were perpetrated under the direction of the ma- chine, the election officers brought with them when they came to the polls a couple of hundred ballots already marked, which were pat in the bottom of the box. When the voting began the first ballot was mark- ed, or rather the first voter was marked 201 instead of one and when the votes were counted the two hundred were included. But they weren’s all straight tickets. With a sense of humor that was commendable, the boss of the Division divided up the gave the magisterial candidate most obnox- ious to the machine, two ont of the two hundred. But the fraudulent votes were cast, and counted in that division as they were cast and counted inall other divisions in thas city, and with the knowledge and consent of the party managers. The sheriff of the county, JAMES L. MILLS, organized the conspiracy and has already thrown the shield of his official station over the erimin- als. It may be added that the court will come to the help of the perpetrators of she votes for subordinate officers, and even |. dent a charge was made that in the event of ROOSEVELT'S election chairman CoRr- TELYOU of the Republican National com- mittee would be appointed Postmaster General. Easily the greatest source of treasury looting at present is in the charge for carrying the mails. Millions of dollars re annually stolen by the railroads for this service by collusion with the postal officials who award the contracts. When CORTELYOU, as the prospective Postmaster General, demanded contributions from the railroads which carried mail cars he got semi-official denial of the intention to ap- point him was made. A year ago, when the postal scandal was fresh in the minds of the people President ROOSEVELT exerted his influence to prevents an investigation. He traded patronage for votes just as freely as a buckster exchanges cabbages for cash and nobody could quite understand the reason for his anxiety. It was alleged that the expense of his $50,000 trip to Yellowstone park the year before had been charged up in a bill for carrying mails and that he wanted to prevent the exposure. In the light of present incidents it may be conjectured that in addition to that reason for preventing an investigation the campaign plans afforded another cause for objecting. In any event it may be assumed that the campaign charges that CORTELYOU was ‘holding, up’’ the mail-carrying railroads during the campaign were founded in fact. The part of the story which involved his appointent to the office has been falfilled by his nomination to the Senate on Mon- day and it is reasonably certain that the other feature of the narrative was equally accurate. For the next four years the mail-carrying railroads will loot the gov- ernment mercilessly for the reason that money was needed during the campaign to debanch the ballot and CORTELYOU, now dress was singularly uncharacteristic. Un- like any of his speeches it was brief. It ROOSEVELT is anything he is loquacious. He loves to dilate and amplify. He is only happy when he is garrulous. But last Sat- urday he was entirely different and strange as it may appear he was actually brief if not entirely epigrammatic. As a matter of fact he scarcely referred to any public question. He made a sort of indefinite prom ise to behave in the event that-he is giv en his own way, but really thete is noth- ing in his inavgural address which could The absence of the characteristic boast and banter from the President’s inaugural address, however, must not be taken as an indication of a change of mind or an alter- ation of purpose. He is precisely the same impetuoas, willful, impulsive and unrea- sonable being that he was six months ago w hen he. was pleading for extraordinary power and pining because Congress wounldo’t surrender all its prerogatives to his caprice. He didn’t express his ambi- tions in his inaugural address for the reason that he was afraid such a declaration would alarm the country. Bat he was just as careful to avoid promises in the other d irection so that be begins his new term unhampered. The county is in a splendid condition of prosperity. Industiial activity has compelled an advance in wages in the most important manufacturing enterprises in the country. That is to say, the Steel t rust bas announced an increase in wages just at the moment that the President was about to be inaugurated. But it must not be understood that the two incidents had any relationship with each other. On the contrary, read between the lines the President's address means a radical policy which will destroy prosperi- ty and in the end involve the country in troubles which will bring disaster. We On Saturday at noon Theodore Roose- velt ceased to be President of the United Ssates by virtue of his succession to that office from the vice presidency to fill the vacancy caused by the death of a chief executive elected to the position by the people, and became President deliberately chosen by a vast majority of the voters of the Nation for the office. He is there- fore freer than ever to carry out the pledges upon which he was chosen, and to execute the commission given him by the people when they voted for him last November, In the matter of political reform the President has a chance to do a most im- portant service to his country. He is no bimself is known to abhor. It grieved many of his lifelong friends and admirers that be should have in any way counte- nanced the Platts, Quays, Addickses and Penroses of his party and others of similar stripe. If he will now speak out clearly for honesty in the conduct of party affairs and of elections he will rally all the good citizens of the country to hig support. Such election frauds as have been committed in Philadelphia, Denver, St. Louis and else- where strike at the life of the republic, and President Roosevelt can do no better service to it than to put the emphatic seal of his condemnation on them and all who profit by them, no matter who they may be. The Statesman or the Jingo. From the New York World. : Only onee has the Monroe Doctrine been menaced, and it it is well worth while to examine the theories of the great Amer- ican who was at the head of the State De- partment during that eritical period. Writing to General Kilpatrick in June, 1866, Mr. Steward said in discussing the French invasion of Mexico: : ‘‘We therefore concede the right to every nation to make peace or war for such caus- es, other than political or ambitious as they may see fis. f ‘‘In such wars as are waged between na- tions which are in friendship with our- selves, if they are not pushed like the French war in Mexico to the political point before mentioned, we do not interfere, but remain neutral, conceding nothing to one belligerent that we do not concede to the other and allowing to oue belligerent what vi i at Centre Hall, of the Northern conference of the Central Pennsylvania ‘Synod of the Lutheran church. —The Clearfield Manufacturing Co’s plant, which has been idle for some time, resumed operations on Monday. Hon. James Kerr bas bought the plant. —The new $40,000 Roman Catholic church of the Immaculate Conception was dedicated at Lock Haven, on Sunday. has a seating capacity of over five hundred. ' —At the Pittsburg pigeon show, Boyd C. Evans, of Tyrone, was again: a great prize The church $40.00 livery hire for his own horse. a h I icht. V his | be” Ji a longer under any obligations to court the | winner. His birds captured eight frst was elected District Attorney. Then he | Whatever he wanted on sight. When this | be literally construed even as a prom- Tov of ; I : : =, : : : : : : cal leaders who hold their | prizes, sis d, fi The American Book Concern would returned home, and through the malfeas- | fact was pointed out during the campaign a | ise to be good. Power oT art oiorive 0 Ee eles x second, one-fourth and a special —Twelve locomotives a week are being de- livered by the Baldwin works to the Penn- sylvania railroad following the orders given by that road for 525 locomotives several weeks ago. —The Pennsylvania railroad company will spend $1,000,000 building new stone bridges over the Juniata river, completing the four-tracking and minimiz- ing the curve in the line at that point. near Lewistown, —The Central Pennsylvania Round Table of superintendents and principals will hold its semi-annual meeting in the chapel of the State Normal school, at Lock Haven, on Fri- day and Saturday, March 17th and 18th. —The horribly mutilated body of R. P. Cunningham, a freight brakeman on the Pittsburg division, was found just east of the station at South Fork about midnight Thars- day. He had evidently fallen from his train and been ran over. —Clarence McCormick, aged 17, was shot and instantly killed by Benjamin Africa while playing ingdon, on Sunday. The boys were very friendly, and the accident: occurred when they were least aware of the danger. “William Tell” at Hunt- —W. L. Cooper, assistant superintendent of the Pittsburg division of the Pennsylvania railroad is to succeed George B. Beale as su- perintendent of the Bedford division. Mr. Beale is. to take charge of the Chautauqua division with headquarters at Oil City. —It is expected the big hotel, known as we allow to the cther. . . | Who is the better adviser— William H. Seward or Theodore Roosevelt? Who 'is the safer leader—the man who successfully maintained the Monroe Doctrine on the Flow only occasion it was ever threatened, or the + It is so seldom that we have an opportun- man that has invented an entirely new code ily to endorse that vain old humbug, | of responsibility and an entirely new cata- long until Palestine will be a Holy Land in more ways than one. ..,—Will that great religious revival that is sweeping over Philadelphia bring the Hon. SAM SALTER to the penitential bench. SAM would make a dandy class meetin’ hope that such evils may be averted, but the outlook is ominous. crime the moment that they are arraigned for trial. But it is a good sign, neverthe- less, that the arrests have been made and a trial is promised. That in itself will act as an admonition against similar operations in the fature and may to some extent de- “The Dimeling,”” ‘at Clearfield, will be open to the public by June 1st. ‘‘The Dimeling”’ will be the Bellevne-Stratford of Central Penusylvania as every room is to be fitted out with all the modern improvements, in- cluding a telephone. Postmaster General, got what he wanted. Pleading for Power. ; The Governor Right for Once. President ROOSEVELT has sent his second _— message to the Senate asking for the rati- fication of his agreement with Santo Do leader it they could only convert him, He crease the volume of fraud in that city. mingo to administer the fiscal affairs of Governor PENNYPACKER, that we hasten ‘logue of imaginary dan —The annual meeting of the Ye .=s18 such a good repeater. Fu bl a | that little Republic and guarantee its debts | $0 assure him of our “distinguished consid. | Wiser connselor—The Foreign Missionary society of the Hunt- TE Dar Sa a Kg rad vs yt IE va sna, AR bp aiid BEL, Lad Ua og EN it pk a . Si ro ? > x y | consid- 5 a AR Ah] ae In 5 4 11 —Judge LOVE, it is said, is now engaged [© Casegdf Petiy ‘Lareeny. ' 4° “{oits Harogean creditors. - Tn this second | eration,” in" the oe ‘veto of the the Monae Dostrinie | | ingdon Presbytery will be held in the Pres- — ‘ 1 . ‘byterian church of Philipsburg on the 20th mig | and 30th of March. About one hundred and twenty-five delegates will be in attendance, besides visitors from other churches. —The largest coal deal in the history of the bituminous region of this State was con- summated last Friday when the Westmore- land Coal company took over the Penn Gas Coal company, the purchase price being about $3,500,000, on a basis of $400 an acre for coal land and $1,500,000 for equipment. ; —The York Bridge Co., represented by Boyd Musser, formerly of Bellefonte, se- cured the contract with the Northumber- land county commissioners for the erection of a $65,125 bridge across the north branch of the Susquehanna river. The survey was made under the direction of Mr. Musser. Eleven other companies competed. —The Altoona and Philipsburg connecting railroad company, through Attorney John B. Uhle, of New York, last Thursday confessed judgment in the United States circuit court in favor of Samuel P. Langdon on two judg- ment notes, aggregating with interest $844,- 996.59. In the papers filed it was stated that the two notes were given for money advauced the railroad by Langdon. commit us to the position Europe desires us to take in order to make us responsible for all the 'misgovernment of the Spanish- American Republics?’ tiessage he’ renews his absurd interpreta-. tion of the MONROE Doctrine and repeats his silly declaration that the government of the United States must either guarantee such debts or else permit the European creditors to take possession of the territory of the delinquents. Such a statement is an insult’ to the intelligence of the Senate and the country. : President ROOSEVELT’S agreement with a bogus government of Santo Domingo was a usurpation of power entirely as culpable as the expedition of AARON BURR in Mex- ico ahout a hundred years ago and equally in an effort to bring about the impeachment of Judge SMITH, of Clearfield. A fact that makes us conclude that his ex-honor is not satisfied with the lickin’ be got last fall but is ’lectioneerin’ for another. the bill, or rather joint resolution, appro- priating $60,000 for a State exhibit at the LEwIs and CLARK exposition to be held at Portland, Oregon, during the coming summer. That was one of the most inex- cusable small jobs that has ever been at- tempted by a mercenary political machine. It was simply and solely a matter of plun” der. The scheme was to make a royal junk- et to the Pacific coast, at the cost of $60,- 000 fo the people. Everybody remembers the, Buffalo expo- sition. $35,000 were appropriated for the purpose of making an exhibit and wasted. That is, a building estimated by experts to be worth abont $4,000 was erected, for which a charge of $16,000 was made against the State. That exposition was patronized by near neighbors and people’ who might have been made customers of our mills and factories. But no other exhibit was made except the cheap building, and the whole appropriation was thus wasted. . An appro- priation for the Portland show would have been wasted in precisely the same way. We regret that in his veto message the The feebleiiattempt at looting the treas ury of the government at Washington by voting mileage for the extra session last fall was ridigulous because it was so ex- oeedingly trifling. The total amount of the robbery, it it had been consummated, would have been only $190,000, and that amount would have been divided into nearly 400 pagts. Bus there is little differ- ence in ‘the turpitude between petty and grand larceny and most of us would care- lessly say that of the two we prefer the higher grade of crime. In other words, etty larceny excites contempt as well : ¢ Ie condemnagion while we might admire deserving of punishment. Its palpable pur- the dash and courage of a genuine high- | P8¢ is to seize the Latin-American Repub- wayman or baok burglar. 3 : lic and the method adopted to compass But we have to regret that of the ninety the result is clearly a violation of every petty larcenists who tried to loot the principle of justice and international law. treasury, two were Pennsylvania Democrats. | HaPPily, the Senators understand the ques- It isn’t worth while to state where the | tion and are not sufficiently amenable to gentlemen who thus disgraced their State | the influences of graft to yield their con- - iences to such enterprises. and party reside. One doesn’t have to go |!" Hhoays Tas ar this. town to be able to thiow a Reports from Washington indicate that stone into the district represented by one the President's second message will have Would Hit Them on the Tender Spot. —Ot all the ridiculous undertakings that Hy effort of former Judge LOVE, of Bellefonte, and former Congressman Hicks, of Altoona, to impeach Judge SMITH, of Clearfield, is the limit. The Pennsylvania Legislature is bad enough but i6 would never make itself a party to such petty spite. From the Lincoln (Neb.) Commoner. The Minneapolis Journal, in a special dispatch from Washington discusses the in- timate relations existing between the great corporations and several United States sen- ators. Senator Platt’s opposition to the post check system is due to his interest in the express companies; Senator Depew’s subserviency to the railroads is well under- stood, and the championship of the trusts and the high tariff by other senators is easily explained. If President Roosevelt wants to strike the senate in the solar plex- us let him propose an investigation of the senate’s corporate connections. —We wonder if the Hon. HAMPY CAR- SON considers himself one of those “cheap lawyers who are dear at any price’’ to whom Mr. FRANCIES, of Allegheny, referred on thé floor of the House on Taesday, when he was defending the proposed increase of the salary of the Attorney General from $5,000 to $12,000 per year. —That manipulating ballot boxes has gotten down toa very fine science in Phila- delphia is evidenced by the fact that out of its most mediocre citizens all of its “‘states- men’’ are manufactured. [In the line of A Blessing to be a Filipino. From the Bloomfield (Ind.) Demo crat. The government of the United States pays $500 per year for educating each Fili- pino boy sent to American schools to he educated. We do not know whether this will meet the approval of the laboring men of this nation, who are struggling to making a supposed something out of a, known n othing the hallot{box fixers of that city are discounting the professional scien- tists many, many times. — When you read of a girl who is a’ fine shot, a splendid horsewoman, a mistress. of golf, an expert tennis player,an accomplish- ed pianist, an amateur artist, a finished lingnist and who dances like a dream you can makc up your mind that her mother has to see that her stockings are darned and the ravelings kept from the edge of her —Congress has wisely refused to increase the salary of the President from $50,000 to $100,000 per annum. maintains the dignity of our chief execu- tive. It is character, and if Mr. ROOSEVELT does not have enough of the latter it were better that the world know our humilia- tion, for, possibly, it would help us in the fature to select men who bave more of statesmanship and less of flambonyancy. It is not money that —Aceording to the statement just pub- lished by the County Commissioners show- the assets and liabilities of the county for the year ending January 20d, 1905, there was on that day a cash balance of $10,864.- 03 in the hands of Treasnrer FOSTER. On the contra side of the account we observe an item called “Bills payable..$10,000.00."’ Of course we do not wish to do any of them in one of the banks of the town, to make cash ‘balance in this way. The only surprise is that our frenzied financiers didn’t make the note larger so they could show a larger balance of cash on band. of them and the other was an independent | ®© More effect than the first on the minds candidate against the regular nominee of the party in the district which he mis- represents, last fall. But it is a real com- fort to be able to add that both of them were retired to private life at the close of the session last Saturday, and we hope the retirement is for both time and eternity. A Pennsylvania Democrat who would vote for that scheme for looting the treasury is too contemptible to be considered at all. Besides he is an idiot, for any man old enough to be in Congress now must have known the result of the last congressional raid on the treasury, which occurred abous 1877 and was known as the ‘‘salary grab.” There was some reason for that measure and if it had not been made retro-active,and con- sequently unconstitutional, it might have been approved by the people. But because it was retro-active it was universally con- demned and no man who voted for it, with probably ome exception, ever recovered public confidence. —It is rumored that immediately upon the close of his present term of school J. A. FEIDLER will launch a new Republican newspaper in Bellefonte. While it appears to most people that the newspaper field 1n Centre county is already overcrowded, yet Mr. FEIDLER has the energy and ability tomake an influential journal, il he has succeeded inf interesting enongh capital tp | ——'Wher, Judge ORvVIS got through with his talk to. the astorneys, of license court day, $here was. no room for any. of them to think thas they hada ‘‘pull wish the court.” * * of the Senators. The prompt condemnation of his usurpation whieh followed his first message is likely to be emphasized after consideration of his second. There are law- yers in the Senate who can interpret the MoNROE Doctrine and who have respect for their oaths of office and the traditions of the country and they will not permit this broncho buster toinvade the sacred prinei- ples of justice in order that a President may have the privilege of wielding the big stick, { To Impeach Judge Smith, Ex-Judge JOHN G. LOVE, of this place, and ex-Congressman J. D. Hicks, of Altoo- na, have been employed by HARRY WaASH- BURN, of Osceola, to prepare the papers in the case and institute proceedings in the Pennsylvania Legislature for the impeach- ment of Judge ALLISON O. SMITH, of Clear- field county. WASHBURN gives as his reason for bringing the impeachment proceedings that Judge SMITH personally instituted a boycott against his place of business by notifying retail dealers in Clearficld county not to buy any goods at wholesale from WASHBURN; and the allegation is further made that Judge SMITH admitted having advised hotel keepers as above stated. Up to this time the case has not been bronght before the Legislature and there is a prevaling belief that = the whole mat- worrying himself over the outcome, even though both Love' and HIoKs were this week in Philadelphia where, it is ‘alleged, they were in Sosuliation with Senator PENROSE as to thie ‘advisability of pushing the proceedings. hk ) Governor failed to complain of the palpable fraud with respeot to the-appropriation. In cther words, we regret that he didn’t serve notice on the Legislature that such absurd appropriations will always be vetoed because thay are’ absurd and dishonest. But he gave a good reason for his action, nevertheless, in that the vicious habit of legislating commissions into existence is subversive of the constitution and danger- ous to the State. The habit has been grow- ing for many years and has reached propor- tions which are threatening. ' We are glad that is is killed for good and all. —— David Chambers, George and James Uzzle, of Snow Shoe, and Dr. John Hagg, of Williamsport, were arrested one day last week by State game warden Berrier, charged with hunting deer with dogs. The four men will be given a hearing before Justice Jobn M. Keichline, in ‘this place, on Tuesday, March 28th. ——Those who are sufficiently interested in the Bellefonte hospital conld help it very materially just now by addressing a letter to the Hon. Lee Plammer, chairman of the House committee on appropriations at Harrisburg; briefly stating the good work it is doing and setting forth its need of State aid. : : # Tat ———— GREEN and DILLEN will they, after learn- ing that they have just sixty days more to live, continue as desperately indifferent to their fate as they have been in the past, dr educate their own sons at the same time helping to pay the expenses of educating those boys, whom we purchased in the $20,000,000 deal. You, poor—but honest and hard working American boys, who are striving to educate yourselves in our colleges—don’t you wish you were a Fili- pino for the purpose of being educated.” Senator Knox Critically 111. Senator P. C. Knox is critically ill in Florida, and there is grave fear among his friends that he will not be able to take his seat in the United States senate. The first intimation of the serious illness of Mr. Knox came from Philadelphia, where it is announced that two well-known Republican politicians had gone to Florida to investigate personally the condition of" the Senator, and they bad returned with the startling news that the rumor that Mr. Knox was suffering from Bright's disease | instead of grip is true. ” Mr. Knox was sent south some time ago at the earnest solicitation of President Roosevelt, who was advised as to his con- dition and be insistsd upon the Senator go- ing south, Every effort has been made to keep the real condition of Mr. Knox from the public, and Some time ago, when Sena- tor Penrose, at Philadelphia, gave out the news fo Pittsburg, political friends thas none save the doctors were allowed to see him, there was a great outcry from the in-' ner circles at Washington that Mr. Knox was not ill, and so forth. Ce adi! However, a few days later there came the news from Philadelphia that an import- ant conference on railroad rates to be held in Pittsburg, could not be held because’ poned until Feb. 17. There was" b chaucs of having this mesg on th hon i date, either, as the condition of the junior senator did not improve, and it was gi will they show a penitential inclination ? “1 for his health. Yk SH Lan HEWito Sra n 3s i out that he would go south for some oe) —Thomas Rathfon, a Civil war veteran of Puxtonville, Snyder county, and a young woman of the same place, who had secured a marriage license on Feb. 7th, 1896, were mar- ried Friday. The couple appeared before justice of the peace H. S. Renninger, who performed the ceremony. The old license being lost a new one was secured. No ex- ‘planation was given as to the delay in the marriage. : —The flagman of the first section of line Friday morning made a gruesome find when the train stopped at South Fork on its way east over the Pittsburg division. He got down from the train to go back and flag and as he did so he saw an object that at- tracted his attention. it proved to be a human hand and a portion of the wrist. toona and turned over to the authorities. fast He picked it up and The find was brought to Al- —C. W. Sullivan was arrested at Roaring Spring last Wednesday by postoffice inspector J. H. Wardl: on the charge of forging a money order for $12 in Texas four years ago. Since then the government authorities have been endeavoring to locate him and finally succeeded in placing him at Roaring Spring where he has resided for the past six months. While there he led a most exemplary life. ‘He was arraigned before United States com- missioner J. H. Craig and held for court, i—(C. M. Ellenberger and John A. Fetter, ithe sled and machin |g Jumpin os ‘|'of Tyrone, ‘were driving to Union Furnace several days ago with three sewing machines and, when they reached a narrow place in the road, near Pemberton, one of. the horses shied, pushing the other horse over a twelve- i pil X : : X * i pr i y § Sod field i i it fl 5 as stirred up asa bit of political hun- | ——Now that Governor PENNYPACK ER | Mr. Knox, the prime wover, could not be dil + ta an injustice but we do: wish to inform you | keep it floating. fii 36. Was stirred up ax bit uf poiitioa] NOW, 4a), \aovernor, ition of | there. This was about Feb. 11, and at the | foot embankment into the Juniata river, that there is a connty note for: $10,000.00 [ «© 1 FEEE————— combe.,, In any event, Judge SMITH is not | bas named the: day for the execution, of, réquest ef Knox's physicians this was post. | which is six feet deep in that point. Tho falling horse dragged the other one with it into the icy waters and on top of them came .. The two men, gs- n a short time the d machines were fished out of m.' One horse was badly ‘cut and but notiseriously hurt, : (va ELE fia 05d S10 Deigs
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers