fe ‘BY P. GRAY MEEK. ————————————————————— Ink Slings. Soon the hopeful fisherman + Will be busy as can be A fixin up his rod and line And bottlin’ up his ‘““tea’’. _ If trout won't bite at all, they say— And I think the story’s right— You can change your luck quite hand’ly With a swig of old “snake bite,” —Wednesday was hoi enough to make us feel as if winter flannels were decidedly de irop. : —O! course HARRY WASHBURN wasn’t disappointed. He got just what. everyone expected. —The sweet girl graduate is beginning to look around for, white dress goods and kid slippers. ~-This is the time of the year when “the only can on the dump’’ get’s all the company it wants. —And now come well grounded rumors that Russia and Japan are to get together —for peace this time. —The Storey cotton swindle was another case of pulling the wool over the public eye, only they didn’t use wool. ~—It requires so little to make the average candidate happy that really it is everyone’s duty to contribute a little. Lend him your ear. —Judging from the proprietorial air Senator PENROSE uses when talking of Pennsylvania he must be in possession of a olear title from WILLIE PENN. —CAssIE CHADWICK is to spend ten years in prison for her financial escapades. By the time she gets out it is to be hoped that she will be old enough to know better. —An increase of wages is a very accept- able thing for any workman and. when that increase is made voluntarily it makes better workmen. ' Result, watch for more record breaking rune at the Nittany fur- nace. Ina _—Japan has asked for $800,000,000 in- demnity from Russia as part of the terms on which the war will be ended. Suppos- |! ing she gets such ‘an award we presume that President ROOSEVELT will be volun- teering to collect the bill. : —Why wouldn’t it bea good plan to accept cash in lieu of the PRUNER proper- ties and spend the money on a new hos- pital building in Bellefonte; calling it the PRUNER hospital; with a ward open to every school of medicine ? —It Philadelphia is all there is of the Pennsylvania Legislature why not§ extend the limits of that city west to the Ohio lineand call Pennsylvania Greater Phila- delphia. This would also end all the fuss aboat'a Greater Pittsburg. March may go out 1iké a lion ~ Or she may go out like a lamb - But whether its roaring or sighin’ "Be cheerful, and don’t care a bobee.,. » * "—The Philadelphia North American on Tuesday illustrated the WATCHMAN’S sug- gestion of a plum tree in capitol park, Har- risburg, as a proper monument for QUAY. It pus intoa very ludricons cartoon the. verbal design submitted by this paper. —Governor FoLK, of Missouri, says ‘‘good citizens may make good laws, but no law can make good citizens,’’ at a ban- quet speech in Philadelphia. a few even- ings ago. And bow true it is, for we see it exemplified every day the Legislature is in session in Harrisbuig. » —The Adams county woman who tried to prevent an eviction by taking off all her clothes and crawling into hed must have fairly languished for a fig leaf when the persevering constable grabbed ber up in his arms and carried her out onto the road. —No, dear reader, the act to prevent idiocy which is before the Pennsylvania Legislature will not.be applicable to Gov- ernor PENNY. Acts of Assembly are never made to be applicable to those who help make them—aunléss it is on a little matter like increase of salaries. —Since PEARY'’S new arctio boat is to be called the ROOSEVELT it. may.be expected that the explorer’ will have strenuous times during his next search for the pole, He should have named his boat FAIR- BANKS, forif any name given has an affinity for frostand ice that of the vice President is the one. : —This month will see the close of the eareer of The Pennsylvania Methodist, Dr. Sinas C. SWALLOW’S publication. While i6 is not te be inferred that there isa dearth of Methodists to read it, it is possible that Dr. SwALLOW found ous that at times it was rather too strenuous for them. Be- ‘sides, the field of church papers is gradual- ly being contracted by the amount of space the great secular journals give to the same themes. —The PRUNER orphanage question bas stirred up considerable discussion in the community and the wise (?) man is jump- ing to the front of the platform with all manner of suggestions. It isa proposition worthy the most profound consideration by Bellefonte. We are already encumber: ed with so many calls for aid that council will naturally go slow in add- ing another to the list. With more churches than we need, a Y. M. C. A., Pet- riken hall, the Academy, the monument, the hospital and sundry other institutions claiming public support Bellefonte staggers under a load of charities moss of the time. While we are not opposed to the orphanage, il it can be made self supporting, we want to record our vote against the proposition right here, if it means some one carrying VOL. 50 The Shame of the Machine. The resolution introd uced by Represen- tative MCCLAIN, of Lancaster, on Monday evening, providing for the reoall of the odious EARHARDT bill which had been fraudulently counted as passed last week was no sign of repentauce. It was simply an acknowledgment of being ‘‘caughé in the act, or as the lawyers put it in Jflagrante delictu. With a purpose well settled, after matare coasideration, the legislative machine determined to pass that measure with or withont sufficient votes. The bill is the most atrocious ever presented in any Legislature. Its real title ought to have been an act to encour- age prostitution and legalize the sednction of young girls. 1lts purpose was to recruit the army of fallen women. No such bill could have been introduced in any other Legislature in the civilized world. Bat the political procarers were caught in the act. The falsification of the record was detected and exposed. At first this fact didn’t swerve them from their pur- pose. The resolution of Mr. HITCHCOCK, on Thursday last, was raled out of order in characteristic machine fashion. It was ex- peoted that wounld end the matter. Speak- er WALTON, the most brazen political prostitute the State has ever produced, dis- missed the subject with contempt. Bus the protests of indignant citizens from the valleys and mountains of the State rolled in upon him and like all criminals he cringed before the overwhelming tide of indignation and had his previously dis- goad lickspittle, FRANK MCCLAIN, fer his apology to the public. It was the most contemptible act ever witnessed in the Legislature. In the recall of that bill there is plain confession of fraud. For the purpose of protecting crime and promoting vice the Republican majority of the Legislature had deliberately falsified the vote of the House. That is in itself a most atrocious and for- bidding crime. But in this case it was aggravated by the refusal to correct the record after the fraud had been fully ex- posed. There is no virtue in the belated apology of McCLAIN,. | Toot simply weas- ured his polsroonry. It only marked him down as a contemptible sycophant. As the opening of the session WALTON humil- iated him to an extent that no hovorable man could endure, but like a cringing dog he comes to WALTON’S rescue in his des- perate emergency and has thus earned an- other kick whioh we hope will be hard and swift when the chance comes. > The Governor's Vetoes. Governor PENNYPACKER has earned the approval of the publio by his intelligent and courageous use of the veto power. We bave already referred to a couple of vetoes submitted to the Legislature some time ago. We would be unjust if we failed to commend him for the veto of the new courts bill for Allegheny county and the additional law judge bill for Erie county. These new offices were not needed. The bills were passed in pursuance of a purpose of the machine to increase the political pat- ronage of the organization. Using the bench for snch purposes is the greatest pub- lic evil. On Monday evening of this week he add- ed another to his list of killed legislative enactments which is equally creditable to his integrity and sagacity. A bill which had the double purpose of increasing the compensation and adding to the power of cours stenographers was vetoed on that oc- oasion. It was plainly unconstitutional as the Governor pointed ous, because it divid- ed not only the power but the responsibili- ty of the courts with an inferior officer of the court and it increased the compensa- tion of the court stenographer during his term of office. Either of these faults wonld have been fatal. Together they make the veto peculiarly appropriate. These vetoes justify the hope that when the opportunity comes to him Governor PENNYPACKER will veto the odious vice bills which have been passed or are still pending in the Senate. We mean the PUHL bill compelling the law and order society to publish the list of contributors to its fands and the EARHARDT bills farth- er crippling that association. Some of oar contemporaries have expressed confidence that the Governor will veto all these meas- ures and we are of the same opinion. We bave not hesitated in expressing our dis- agreement with the Governor on some questions and we are the more earnest there- fore in expressing our concurrence in the views which have influenced his vetoes. ——What have you given toward the Bellefonte Academy grounds improvement fund ? If nothing, don’t you think it soon time that you do. The time is now at hand when the grounds are to be gotten in shape for the centennial celebration in June and a8 yet the fond is not anyways near large, enough. Friends of the Academy all over the country should come forth as once with as liberal contributions as pos- sible and thus help to make the surronnd- around a paper every year to make up whatever deficits there may be. . ings in keeping with the handsome new building. 4 STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., MAR. 31, 1905. Roosevelt for Re-election. The New York World which is over-fond of predicting things, bazards the guess that President ROOSEVELT will be his own suc- ce ssor in 1908, notwithstanding his positive declaration that he wonld not again be a candidate. The World bases its opinion on two things. The first is Mr. ROOSEVELT'S complete control of the Republican machine and the other the probable demoralization or want of cohesion in the Democratic par- ty. In both of these propositions the World is very likely to be mistaken. Probably ROOSEVELT has control of his party organi- zation now but the indications are that he will not hold it. So far as the second proposition goes it is already refuted. In the municipal and other elections which have heen held in various parts of the country since the elec- tion of ROOSEVELT the Democratic party has shown up in the finest form. The re- sult of the vote last fall was disappointing and largely for reasons which indicate an absence of party cohesion. That is to say, in Indiana and Missouri and one or two other States it appears that an element of the party preferred the Populist candidate to thas of their own party. But there is no such feeling now. On the contrary the party is in excellent shape. It is no great compliment to the Presi- dent to say that he will be a candidate notwithstanding his solemn pledge to the contrary. But we have as little faith in his veracity as our New York contempora- ry expresses in its prediction. That he will be a candidate if there is a ghost of a chance of his nomination and election we have no doubt. Possibly he will even go to the limit of declaring himself his own successor without the formality of an elec- tion. But we. don’t believe that he will succeed either in getting himself re-elected or continuing by usarpation. By that time he will be ‘“‘found ous.”’ rT ———— Time to Act. The Academy improvement fund has been dragging along for several months and up to this time the desired amount has not been secured. The time when the work should be completed is not far distant, consequently it behooves the trustees and others personally interested in the insti- | tution to get a move on. From our point of view it looks as if the old students and friends of the institution at a distance have done very well, but there are many right bere in Bellefonte who are directly bene- fitted by the Academy who have, as yet, done nothing. They are the ones who should join the list now in order that the work can be carried to completion before the time for the centennial celebration. Mr. OGLESBY PAUL, the famous). land- scape gardener in charge of Fairmount park, Philadelphia, has been here twice; the last time only a few days ago. He made plans and staked out the grounds for improvements that will cost at least $1,000. While they are, necessarily, nos very elaborate they are designed $0 be part of the general landscape effect. when the Academy has acquired adjacen? prop- erty and ultimately becomes the great pre- paratory school that it can be made. We do not presume to say what any in- dividual should do, but we do know that there are a number right here in our midst who sheuld contribute something to this fond and do it at once. not only because of the immediate need, but because of the effect it may have on others. ———— Rev. Crittenden’s Great Work. — The American Sunday school union is sending broadcasta circular showing the wonderful work accomplished by Rev. Richard Crittenden, of this place, asa Sanday school missionary. Among other things it states that he entered the service ‘of the union, May 2, 1864, his field ocon- sisting of ten or more counties in the State. In many communities he was the pioneer laborer for the children in whose behalf he established Sunday schools and enlisted both parents and children in the study of the Bible. For instance, thirty years ago he opened a flourishing school at Rumbarger, Clearfield county, then withons any re- ligious services, watched over by him it continued to thrive. Rumbarger is now the town of DuBois with ten or twelve churches, and trolley cars run where Rev. Crittenden walked through the dense forests. Four hundred and six schools were organized by him in which there were gathered 13,269 persons. He made 12,237 visits to families, doing most of the touring on foot. He often walked thirty miles a day and spent the night in the woods, many a time in an old deserted cabin or dug-ont. He distributed 2,356 copies of the scripture where they were needed, and not less than 70 churches trace their beginning from the Sanday schools he planted. This showing proba- bly is but a small portion of the constant growing results of his labors. ~——If'the weather of the past week is a modulated form of what we will have this summer there will be no question then about it being ‘‘hot enough for you.” Capitol Park Enlargement Beaten. Our Harrisburg contemporaries practic- ally admit shat the bill for the enlarge- ment of Capitol park will fail of passage at the present session. Senator PENROSE, who bas-been at Harrisburg all week, was asked about the matter the other day and said the “outlook is very dubious. I don’t see where the money is to come from for that purpose,’’he continued. Of course that settles it. That much needed improve- ment will fall, not because there isn’t money enough to meet the expenses bust forthe reason that tbe machine wants to keep the money in favored banks and use it for oiling the political automobile. The machine proposes to continue so prolific a source of graft. : But the people of Harrisburg are a good deal to blame themselves for the fail- ure of the passage of an act which would have contributed so largely to the beautification of the capital city. Some of them at least tried to make a source of g raft out of the enterprise itself and Sen- ator Fox introduced a bill asking for an appropriation of at least a million dollars more than necessary for the work. This discouraged some and disgusted. others of the supporters of the enterprise and delay- ed the progress of the bill until other drafts on the treasury intervened and reduced the surplus to the minimum of machine necessities. That is, they want at least $300,000 a year out of it and with a less balance than twelve or fifteen millions that | is impossible. The capitol park ought to be big enough and beautiful enongh to attract the atten- tion and challenge the admiration of every visitor in Harrisbnrg whether a Pennsyl- vanian or resident of another State. Be- cause of that we favored the park extension bill afer it was amended so as to cus ous the sources of graf. We favored the bill, moreover, because of the evil effects of a big treasury surplus and such an expen- diture would help to keep it down until taxes can be rednced or so distributed as to prevent the big balances in the State Treasury. But our hopes in that direction will not be falfilled thie year. We doubt if the extension will come within a genera- tion, Detense of Caleb Powers. An esteemed Philadelphia contemporary is now worrying itself and annoying some others with a scheme to raise money for the defense of CALEB Powrrs, who has twice been convicted of the murder of Gov- ernor GOEBEL, of Kentucky,and is appealing for a new trial. We can’t see any merit in such an enterprise. The fact has heen well established tbat CALEB POWERS and others entered info a conspiracy to murder Governor GOEBEL and that he was murdered. The reason of the purpose to murder bim was to prevent him from tak- ing the oath to which he had been elected by the people and permit his Republican competitor for the place to usurp the power. : . The Republican party literally ‘‘adopted’’ that benious crime. That is to say, within a few months after it was perpetrated one of the conspirators, a man named TAYLOR who had been defeated for Governor, went to Philadelphia as a delegate to the National convention that nominated McKINLEY aud ROOSEVELT for President and Vice Presi- dent. The ovation was not on account of any civic distinotion which TAYLOR had achieved. It was not on account of any illustrious service he had performed. It was simply for the reason that he bad de- feated the inauguration of a Democratic Go vernor by procuring his murder. Afterward morderer TAYLOR, a fugitive from justice, was apprehended in New York but the then Governor of that State and now President of the United States refased to allow him to be taken back for trial. The federal constitution specifically de- clares that criminals so apprehended must be surrendered but ROOSEVELT never did pay much attention to the constitution. Since, the murderer has been shielded by the authorities of Indiana. We don’t see why people of Pennsylvania should be asked to contribute to the immunity of avother of those conspirators. CALEB Pow- ERS ought to have been hung long ago. ——A number of new names have been added to the WATCHMAN list during the past week, but you likely know of some who are not getting the best county paper published. Speak to them about the WATCHMAN and possibly they will be persuaded that they mighs as well have the best when it is also as cheap as the cheap- est. ——Only fifteen days more until the opening of the trout-fishing season, when every man who owns any kind of an out- fit will be ont angling for the speckled beauties while the small boy with the twine line and bent pin hook will bring home the biggest string. : i ——A new twelve-inch water main is to be laid from the reservoir to the Diamond to connect with the large main up High street and out Allegheny to Linn. thing. NO. 18. “So Say We All of Us.” From the Philadelphia Press. Governor Pennypacker bas acted for the best interest of the State, Judicary and the administration of law in vetoing the bill for an additional cours in Allegheny and Erie Counties. These courts were not needed. They were provided to give places, not to facili- tate legal administration. As Governor Pennypacker justly says, respect for the judiciary as a whole is weakened by the presence of Judges on the bench plainly not needed, mere tax-eaters, with no public reason for their existence. eg This State bas ninety-six Judges, where New York has but seventy-five. The pr portion in the State at large here i8 a Judge to 65,647 persons. In New York it is one to 86,117 persons. New York has all the Judges it needs. So has Philadel. phia, where Governor Pennypacker gives the proportion at one to 86 246. Alleghe- ny has one Judge to 64,568, under she State proportion, Governor Pennypacker’s facts, logic, principles and practice are all convincing. A veto like this is a great service to the Commonwealth, direct and indirect. Ts will receive approval shrough- out the State and displays the Governor at his best as a zealows, judicious, courage- ous and resolute Chief Executive in this particular subject matter. Looks as if it Was to Continue Indefi- nitely. From the Johnstown Demoerat. : The Pennsylvania Legislature is still a stench in the nostrils of the public. [It has no defenders except among its notorious beneficiaries. It is as bitterly assailed for its criminality by the Republican press as by the Democratic newspapers. Even the Governer by his frequent vetoes condemns it. - Of course all the members of the as- sembly are not bad men, but the good ones in it are eo few that they do nos count. And so amazingly are the records falsified that it is practically impossible to ‘identify the good anyway, with the result that they must go in the general estimate. However, who cares? It’s nothing new. I¢’s an old story many times told. Two years hence it will be the same story over again. We are a subservient people. And the more it is rubbed in on us the more we want it rabbed in. And this reminds us that in the near Inture gentlemen who are vow busily disgracing themselves and the state and nation and making some people rich through foul legislation will be smil- ing candidates for re-election—and—and will be ‘“‘trinmphantly?’ elected. Hooray for that ‘‘same old coon.”’ —————— A Great System and a Just One. From the Providence Journal, : Railroads which have not yet given ser- ious consideration to the important subject of pensioning employes who have passed the age limit may find it advantageous to follow the precedent set by the Pennsyl- vania. During the first five years that is pension system has been ‘in operation this company has authorized the payment of $1,614,087 in pensions to retiring employes and also has paid all the expenses of the pension department. The effect on the operatives must be excellent. Men render better service when they understand that their employers do not propose to turn them adrift when age lessens their earning capacity, and a pension system like that of the Pennsylvania enables a railroad com- pany to obtain the highest class of men, as positions are made vacant by death or re- tirement. Unquestionably the Penusyl- vania has found the pension department profitable in that it attracts superior men and inspites a ‘general feeling of loyality. ———— Se ——— Ask Something a Little Easier, Please. From the Philadelphia Press. This country is at peace with all the world, but its war expenditures are so beavy that it is now proposed to put a fax Su tea and Soles in order to find adequate revenue for gunpowder purposes, The State of Pennsylvania Tl the people year after year excessive reve- nues, but in order to keep a large balance on deposit in favored banks and to afford greater opportunity for graft it is proposed to put a tax on coal and oil, putting the producers of coal and oil at a disadvantage in competition with coal and oil producers in other States. : Drunk with power, in State and pation, the Republican party bends itself to the will of a domineering and profligate leader- ship. How long will the taxpayers, who pay the score and suffer the consequences of governmental corruption and extrava- gance, lavishly submit themselves to he fleeced ? About As Low As It Can Get. From the Harrisburg Patriot. In sentencing to the full extent of the law a man convioted of keeping a house of prostitution, Judge Von Moschzisker, of Philadelphia, one day last week said: ‘Who can conceive of a heing lower than a man who would make his living by keeping such a house ?? By the same token, who can conceive of a political organization lower than the one which enters into partnership with such a man, shares with him the wages of wo- man’s shame and in return for fraudulent votes and money, shields him as far as it can from punishment ? Here's Some Good Advice. From the Milton Record. Don’t be a knocker. Don’t kick because you can’t always have your own way, or because you can’t always be the whole Just stop and think a moment and then if you are not a tin cupheaded egotist it will dawn upon you that there are a few other people in the community besides yourself. You will be happier if you just settle down to the idea that yon are only one of many—and possibly a very small potato at thas. : Hl i'w : No Need to Worry. From the Concord (N. H:) Patriot. = * "+ 10 The Tobacco Trust has no need to wor ; Until the Beef Trust is made to toe the mark it may rest perfectly easy. Spawls from the Keystone, io —The Mifflin county fair is a thing of the past. The fair association sold ths build ings and the fences at public sale recently, —Twenty-five car loads of immigrants passed through Altoona last Friday morning ®n route to the west. They were mostly Germans, Russians and Italians. —There seems to be good authority for the statemert that the Duncansville iron works, which have been idle the past three years, will be put in operation again very soon. —A corps of engineers are at work making a survey from Cherrytree down the rivert Clearfield. It is supposed that the survey is being made in the interest of the Wabash R. R. Co. ’ —Twelve locomotives a week are being de- livered by the Baldwin locomotive works to the Pennsylvania - railroad, following the orders given by that road for 525 locomotives several weeks ago. : —With last week’s issue Rev. Dr. 8. (. Swallow discontinued the publication of the Pennsylvania Methodist and in its stead will publish The Church Forum, whose one aim shall be a fight against the liquor traffic.’ ever handed down in “hat part of the State, Judge Kooser, of Somerset connty, last Thursday refused the license of fifteen appli- cants, including some of the best known hotel men in the county. : 1 ' —The Harbison-Walker Co., whose exten - sive fire brick plants are scattered through- out this section, as well as other parts of the country, have adopted the system of pension- ing all their employes who have been steadily in their employ for a period of twenty years. —Last Friday Dr. A. B. Brumbaugh, of Huntingdon, investigated the disease epi- demic at Mt. Union, claimed by the local physicians to be chicken pox,and pronounced it small pox, and virtually the entire town has been quarantined. There are about fifty cases of the disease in the town. ~—While suffering from delirium, the result of illness with which he has been afflicted | some time, Prof. Charles L. Miller,a musician of considerable reputation and organist of St. Thomas’ church, Ashvillé, Cambria county, fell over a banister of the church Wednes- day morning and was instantly killed. ; —Dr. Nathan C, Schaeffer, State superin- report urges that the public schools devote a loved Commonwealth. The day is very fit- tingly called *‘Pennsylvania Day.” This will be observed in many schools throughont the State. —Arthur, the little ten-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Byers, of Harrisburg, formerly of Ramey, was drowned in the Susquehanna river at the former place on Saturday. He and several other boys were playing on the flat boats in the river and in shoving two of the boats ‘apart Arthur lost his balance and fell into the deep water be- tween them. i —The monthly report of the Employes’ relief fund for the Pennsylvania railroad company’s lines east of Pittsburg and Erie, shows that the payments of benefits to its which $41,280 were on account of death and $89,084 on account of disablement. —All canned goods sold in Pennsylvania must have the date of the canning stamped thereon, if a bill introduced by Representa- tive Rose, of Susquehanna, in the Legislature shall become a law. The bill provides that all bottled foodstuffs shall be labeled, and such label shall bear the date of preparation, quality and exact quantity of such goods. —During the past couple of weeks con- siderable counterfeit money, principally half dollar coins, have been circulated in Al- toona. These bogus coins bear various dates and are said to be the best counterfeits that have been in circulation in years. Besides the half dollars, bogus dollars, quarters and dimes are also said to be in circulation. —From the Patton Courier we learn that was commenced Wednesday in Carroll and ‘| Susquehanna townships. A small force of ‘men are employed, which will be increased in the near future and the work pushed to completion. The contract for the building of the road has been let to the'Tennis Bros. Co., of Pittsburg. -—Judge Woods,of the Huatingdon-Bedford Mifflin district, has handed down an opinion in which he decides thai the law giving con- stables remuneration for fighting forest fires is constitutional. The case was: decided on ‘an appeal of the Shirley township constable from the refusal of the county commissioners ‘of Huntingdon county to pay hig'bill. Judge Woods declared that not only constables, but all citizens who assist them are entitled to pay for fighting forest fires. Ci ‘ —Samuel March, a prominent merchant of ‘Altoona was the victim of a clever *‘flim- flam” game Friday. Two men came to his establishment and wanted to deposit two dia- monds for security on a loan, claiming they were stranded there on their way from Phila- delphia. He had the diamonds examined by an expert, who pronounced them good. While dickering over the deal paste stones were substituted, and March did not dis- cover that he had been victimized until the men had gone. —The land upon which the cave at Maple- ton stands has been leased for quarrying purposes and steps taken to forma corpora- tion called the Pennsylvania Limestone and Construction company, of Mapleton, with a capital of $45,000. The incorporators will be I. N. Swepe, W. C. Gayton, Mapleton ; J. W. Kauffman, Huntingdon ; Geroge M. Holtz- man, Dr. A. T. Walter, J. H. Potteiger, J. C, Kirk and George Sadler, Harrisburg. Over 6,000,000 gross tons of stone are now in sight, and surface quarrying has only been done. —Another large coal plant to rival the one planned by the Indiana, Pittsburg and East- ern railroad company . for the southern end of Indiana county will be built at Wallops: burg, in South Mahoning township, the cen- tre of the big Goodyear coal field. Contracts have been lei by the Buffalo and Susque- hanna railroad company, which is controlled | by the Goodyears, for the construction of seventeen miles of road from Juneau, In- diana county, to Plumville. At Juneau the new line will connect with the Buffalo : Rochester and Pittsburg railway. —In one of the most sweeping decisions tendent of public instruction, in his annual day to the study of the history of our be- members and the families of deceased mem bers last month amounted to $130,373; of actual work of comstruction of the trolley : line of the northern Cambria Railroad Co.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers