BY P. GRAY MEEK. A SASS tn a. Ink Slings. —Fortunately for Pennsylvania Gover- nor PENNYPACKER’S idiosyncrasies don’t extend to his ink bottle and veto pen. —Was the snow yesterday morning the saplin’ bender, the onion snow, the daffodil snow or the Easter snow ? —Since that Chicago victory we have been looking for someone to jump to the fore with an Illinois candidate for Presi- dent. —Winter got that old gering in the lap of spring a few hours yesterday morning. The mountains were white with snow. - —1If it is impracticable to have a PRUNER orphanage a PRUNER hospital would be a fine memorial and a useful institution to the entire community. —Next week the man with the longest pole and biggest hook may not catch the most fish bas that won’t deter him from * telling the biggest lies. —The way the Democrats swept Chicago looks as if that city knows where it is to expect good governruent from, even if a HARRISON isn’t at the head of the move- mens. ~—Now is the time when the man who is earning fifty dollars a month sits np nights wondering how he is to pay for that twen- ty dollar spring hat that his wife thinks is a dream. —While hunting big game in Coloradc the President is to guide the country by wireless telegraphy. As to Panama and Venezuela, however, the “big stick’’ will: still be the instrument. —THoMAS LAWSON has consented to go to the aid of Kansas in the fight against the Standard oil. While he may not be able to accomplish much he will make it inter- esting for the parties concerned. —While that bad gang in Philadelphia will steal the city gas works, if it wants them, there is no danger of their stealing the Delaware unless the federal and state governments will agree to dig it out. —The intimation that there ‘is graft in the Bellefonte council is a moet unkind and unwarranted attack upon a body of gentle- men whoserve without compensation and bave done well for the borough’s interest. —The Philadelphia woman who asked $10,000 for four kisses and was awarded $400 must be impressed that while the jury agreed that she delivered the goods yet they were not convinced that it was worth the money. —Since the Governor has vetoed the bill providing for an additional law judge in Cambria county we presume that Judge O'CoNNER will feel thas he is still regard- ed as capable of getting through with the business out there without assistance. —ANDREW CARNEGIE'S denial of his aecredited declaration that ‘‘todie rich is to die disgraced’’ comes a little late, but as we have not heard of any one acting along the line he was supposed to have spggest- ed the lateness of it will not cause any regret. —TIt is all wrong for Philadelphia to cry out to the country Members of the Legisla- sure to save her from the outrageous ripper bills. Philadelphia is alone responsible for the men she sends to the Legislature and if they give her what she does not want it is no concern of the rest of the State. —The death of J. MARSHAL WRIGHT, of Allentown, has removed a gentleman whose life was a pleasure to all those about im. Of a most genial disposition he seem- ed to emis a constant atmosphere of good cheer wherever he went and his friends will be genuinely sorry that he is gone. —The profit in big navies is exemplified by a sale in England on Tuesday. Thirty of her war vessels that cost, originally $15,- 000,000, were sold for $690,600. We are paying millions for such vessels now thas will come under the obsolete class almosé before they are ready for commission. —It was mean of Prof. WILLIAM G. SUMMER, of Yale, to say that it costs as much to build a single battle ship as it would to found and endow a great - university. Of course it is all too true, but the professor would not have said i6 had President ROOSEVELT been a graduate of Yale. —Judging from the spasms of terror that he was thrown into Wednesday [evening when a rat ran up his trouser’s leg and did stunts in the seat thereof we would sug- gest, as a matter of precaution,that the bar keeper at the Brandt house might keep a rat trap in that portion of his apparel. Ot course it woald be little unpleasant if the steel jaws of the trap were to occa- sionally fly shat on him, but that woaldn’t be a circumstance to the unpleasantness he soffered while the rat ran loose around his nether end. —A bill that will befof considerable in- terest to land owners in this section passed the House on Wednesday. It provides for a rebate of taxes to persons who have fifty or more trees per acre of land. If the bill covers mountain lands there will doubtless be many in Centre county to; whom the State will be owing money; if the rebate is large enough. The aot was probably con- ceived as an incentive to preserving forest’ trees and in that it shonld eerve a very ex- cellent purpose, for trees more than any- thing else improve our climatic condition and operate against both floods and dronths. , .., vod i fondness for lin- | VOL. 50 Philadelphia Scems to be Aroused. rn ‘The mutterings which come from Phil- adelphia justify a hope that the people of that city are about ready to revolt against the Republican machine. : They have been long suffering and patient. As one of the most distingnished magazine writers stat- ed it, they bave'heen contented with the corruption. ' Bat it looks now as if their patience is about exhausted. There is an adage that even a worm will turn when trodden on and upon the same principle there is a possibility that the people of Philadelphia may resent the outrages which the Republican organization has been inflicting on them constantly and deliber- ately. There may be a complete political upheaval. How or why the people of Phiadelphia have submitted to the abuses which bave been imposed upon them during the last fifteen years surpasses understanding. Is isn’t possible that they have not known of the outrages. It can hardly be that they are unaware of the fact that they have been mercilessly robbed and that an increase of debt at the rate of fifteen million dollars a year is creating a burden which their children will be unable to bear, for no other purpose than to pay the expenses of the costly vices of their governing class. To assume that is to assume that they are idiots and that is impossible in view of their industrial and commercial progress. Daring the present session of the Legis- lature five infamous bills have been intro- duced. Four of these have been pending for some time and apparently provoked listle opposition, though they were palpa- bly in the interest of crime and vice. The newspapers protested against them, itis true, and occasionally the voice of a citizen ventured a mild objection. The acquies- cence in such legislation implied a de- based level of morals bus there appeared to be acquiescence until the ‘‘ripper’’ bill wae introduced the other day aud that has provoked a perfect storm of indignant protest. The Legislature may pass bad laws, notwithstanding these protests but itis reasonably certain they will be ve- toed. gi The Equitable Scandal. Sonie of our esteemed contemporaries are | - disoussing with much earnestness and some vehemence what has become known as the scandal of the Equitable Insurance com- pany. For example, in the New York World of last Sunday there is an article of four or five ordinary columns in length under the head of ‘‘Equitable Corruption.” It is set in big type and emphasized with double leads. It is, says the writer of it, ‘‘the most astoundivg, far-reaching}ifioan- cial scanda! known in the history of the United States,’’ and he adds, is approach- ing its climax in a battle for the control of the surplus and assets of the Equitable Life Assurance Society.” A financial scandal which involves something like $400,000,000 would justify some hysterics and we are not surprised that our esteemed contemporary, being close to the theatre of action, got a trifle excited. But there will be no climax, no exposure and very little, if any, scandal in consequence of this little family disagree- ment, for that is practically all it is, assam- ing that the corporation is the family. As a matter of fact, the whole affair is a little quarrel among individuals, jealous of each other probably, but bound together by the cohesive force of criminal association and looting operations extending over a period of many years and there will be no real ex- plosion. The fact of the matter is that president ALEXANDER, of the Equitable Assurance Society, undertook to censor Mr. HYDE, vice president, because that young man was getting a trifle gay. Young HYDE, who inherited a majority of the stock of the corporation, gave a ball in Paris and a din- ner in New York at which the French Am- bassador was the principal guest. The ex- pense of the dinner, a trifle of $100,000, was charged to the advertising account of the company and ALEXANDER objected. The quarrel followed and the scandal was an incident. But there will be no litiga- tion for that might put both men in jail, notwithstanding their vast wealth. It will be settled np amicably. —-A certain mixologist in Bellefonte had a few minutes thrilling experience, Wednesday night, that eclipsed everything in the way of snakes, etc. While cleaning up behind the bar he unceremoneously dis- turbed a big rat and in running for cover the rodent sought for a place of safety up the bartender’s trouser leg, and it was sev- eral minutes before the man, with the assist- ance of a half dozen bystanders, succeeded in extricating the rat. . ——On Tuesday the Legislature passed the bill appropriating $6,000 to the Belle- fonte hospital and also one appropriating $247,456 to the Pennsylvania State College passed the Senate. ——The last snow of the season was seen flying yesterday morning. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, Roosevelt for Re-election. President ROOSEVELT has gone on his long-distance hunting trip at the expense of the Pennsylvania and other railroads and it is said that for a month or more he will be outside of the confines of civiliza- tion. On Monday last his luxurious epe- cial train passed through the State over the Pennsylvania railroad. 1: made few stops and he made no speeches in this State. It wasn’t necessary. The Republicans of Pennsylvania don’t count. They are worse than slaves and when anybody wants them if he is a politician he consults, not them bat the bosses. There is no use in wasting breath in coaxing cattle when the lash of the master subdues them at any moment. But he will speak in other States, for this trip is a preliminary campaign excur- sion for the contest of 1908, and he will use his best efforts to win the confidence and support of the people in the West. Incidentally he will hunt “big game,’ and may spend a couple of weeks in the Colo- rado mountaing roughing it in various ways. But the biggest game he will aim at are the State delegations in the next Re- publican national convention and it may be added that he will pay little attention to any that is smaller. His bunting is only with a gun in so far as such equip- ments are the most effective. Among cow. boys the rowel of a spur is more effective than a volume of history. This western trip settles all questions as to President ROOSEVELT'S candidacy for re-election. Immediately after the vote was announced last November he declared that he wouldn’t be a candidate again. It is possible that at that time he may have been sincere in that declaration. But the first breath of favor which came to his no. tice altered that purpose if it had ever at- tained the fixture of a purpose. ROOSE- VELT is not only a candidate for re-election, but he intends to make the corporations pay the expenses of his campaign for nomi- nation and election. This western trip is the first movement in that direction and the Pennsylvania railroad will settle the expense. Pennypacker a Check. The Philadelphia vice bills bave been halted for some reason though nobody ventures a conjecture on the sabjeot. There is no doubts of the fact, however, for the Pahl bill which passed finally more than two weeks ago has not reached the Governor at this writing and neither of the Ehrbardt bills bave been reported from the Senate committee, though one of them was referred to that body a week ago vesterday. The others were referred to the Senate committee on Monday night of this week and might easily have been re- ported out on Taesday. But at this moment, Wednesday noon, they are still. slumbering, and smelling bad, in the com. mittee. There is no way to account for this ex- cept on the hypothesis that the bills have been abandoned. Various reasons might be given for this circumstance. We would be glad to think that the influencing cause is a change of heart upon the pars of the ma- chine managers. But we can’t summon cre- dulity enough to believe that. It has been suggested that the bosses have discovered another method of acheiving the result for which those bills were introduced and pressed. Bat that is alsoa doubtful prop- osition. The most plausible notion is thas the Governor has given notice that he will not approve the bills and that in disap- proving them he will say something whiol would be better left unsaid. : ; In this connection itis only just to say that Governor PENNYPACKER is making an enviable record with the exercise of the veto power this year. Two years ago we expressed the opinion that the malign in- fluence on the Governor was QUAY and that if his Excellency could separate him- self from his absurd infatuation for that arch-conspirator, he would be all right. His record this year confirms that view. Occasionally, under the inspiration of incidents with which QUAY was closely associated, the Governor still rambles into’ dangerous and doubtfal ground. Bus as a rule he is pursuing a different course this year and whatever others think we believe it is the resul$ of his own honest impulses. ——1It is no unusual thing to hear of a house or a barn burning or even the woods to be on fire, but there was a fire in Belle- fonte last Saturday night that was some- what exceptional, inasmuch as it was the graveyard that burned. It was nearly two o’clock Sunday morning when Mr. Port, the keeper, was notified that the Union cemetery was on fire. An investigation showed that a fire had been started in the dead and dry grass and it was sweeping along somewhat on the order of a prairie fire. Ere the flames could be extinguished about one-third of the cemetery had been ourned over and about twenty rods of fence on the south side destroyed. The authorities are now hunting for the misore- ants who started she fire. PA., APRIL 7, 1905. An Unjust Majority. On Monday evening last Senator GRIM, of Bucks county, was made to feel the brutal force of a oconscienceless majority. He offered a resolution to discharge a com- mittee from the further consideration of a bill the purpose to suppress which is obvious. Senator WooD, of Westmoreland county, whose features prove the DARWIN theory, was in the chair. of Philadelphia, raised the point that the resolution was not in order, though since time out of mind one of the orders for Mon- day nights is original resolutions. The chair, rocking just as a monkey sways in the branches of a tree, decided that the point of order was well taken. . A more absurd incident has never occurred in a parliamentary body. Senator GRIM protested and he was sap- ported by Senator HALL, of Elk,Jand Sen- ator HERBST, of Berks. But the machine ediot had gone forth, the gentlemen were rapped to order aud the routine proceed- ings continued. Sometime ago,!president pro tem. SPROUL bad made a diames- rically opposite ruling on a precisely simi- lar point and after Senator GRIM had oh- tained the record of that event he arose to a question of privilege and cited the faot. Sepater Scorr made the point that the question was not privileged andjthe chair sustained him. All efforts to correct the obvious injustice failed. In the Seuate there are forty Republicans and ten Demcorats. Of the forty Repub- licans there are two,Col. IRVIN, of this dis- trict, aud Mr. STEWART, of Franklin coun- | ty, who are disposed to be fair. But that leaves the division at thirty-eight to twelve and still the majority is afraid to be juss to the handful which constitutes the op- position. In other words, with the strength of a giant in a contest with the weakness of a midget, the Republican majority in the Senate is as cowardly as a wolf and invokes injustice and gag method to pre- vent an encounter. Senator GRIM was silenced on Monday evening but the echoes of bis protest will reverberate throughout the State for years. % Roosevelt’s Usurpation. If the reports from Washington]are ac- curate we no longer have a constitutional government. That is, those provisions of the constitution of the government which makes Congress a co-ordinate branch of the governing authority have been set aside and the President governs like the Czar of Russia. This fact has been revealed in the organization of the Isthmian canal board, especially. Daring the recent session of Congress the President asked for legislation to enable him to entirely change the Board conducting'that enter- prise. There were seven members on the board which he said were toojmany. He wanted the number reduced tofthree bus Congress refused to adopt his sug- gestion. The President has not been greatly put out by this determination of Congress, however. In other words, he has not been diverted from his parpose to organize the commission in his own way. On the}jcon- trary, as soon as Congress got away from the capital he set about arranging matters to suit himself. His first step was a peremptory demand upon each of the seven commissioners to resign. Of course this demand was complied with. Three of the members are associated with the govern- ment in another way and had no alterna- tive. When he got them out he simply appointed successors enough to carry out his plans and is in control as effectually as if the legislation he asked had been enacted. This is not only a usurpation of power but it is treating Congress witk contempt. It the legislation authorizing such pro- ceedings as he has adopted had not been i Be —— -, refused, he could easily claim that exigen- cies required drastic measures and he had no reason to think that Congress would object to the exercise of unusual, not to say extraordinary power. It would be false but the President doesn’t hesitate to go tosuch extremes when necessary. Bus under existing conditions such a claim will not hold for the reason, that Congress abs olutely refused to invest him with the ‘power and his usurpation is therefore aggravated by temptuously. treating Congress oon- ——Last Saturday the Lock Haven Ez- press came out in an enlarged form, one column being added to each of its eight pages, making it a six column quarto. This move was rendered necessary because of its large and increasing advertising patronage and the introduction of several new features. We congratulate the Messrs. Kinsloe on this manifestation of prosperity and we trust their good lnck will continue, as the Express is one of the brightest ex- changes that comes to our desk. ——The Senate, on Taesday, passed the bill authorizing the gigging of eels, carp, suckers and mullets. From Colliers Weekly. stance. There is Pennsylvania, for ex- Senator SCOTT, ! | nations, with England as the pioneer, have NO. 14. How Republicanism Succeeds tn Colo- rado. LIE Government as disgraceful as thas en- joyed by the State of Colorado is not often contemplated by countries which the world calls civilized. The Constitution of the United States, guarantees to the people of each State a Republican form of govern- ment. It need not be Republican in sub- ample. Bat the form must be preserved. In Colorado not only is the will of the people despised, but the mere pretence of popular liberty - was abandoned when strikers were seized by soldiers in the service of mine owners, and taken out of the State by violence without any cloak of laws, without even the most perfunctory trial, the Courts being told to go to the devil by the combination of which the elements were the. Governor, the mine owners, and the soldiers. The peeple submitted, puz- zled hy the balancing evil on the other side, but they expressed their di roval by defeating Peabody for Governor. There may be a few Republicans who helieve Peabody was re-elected on an honest count, but we doubt if there are a dozen in the State. Some Republican papers, and some Republican legislators, even in Colorado, were honest enoogh to admit that Adams was elected. The Legislatare calmly stole the Governorship. The Peabody people were compelled to divide with another faction, and hence the deal with the Lieu-- tenant Governor. On our theory of gov- erument the people of Colorado muss save themselves, if they wish to be saved, The nation can not interfere. Local responsi- bility is the basis of free government. It is the opposite of orderly aatocracy, which diminishes certain irregularities at the ex- pense of the individual's free initiative. Our system also acts as quarantine. It confines political diseases to their spot of origin, instead of allowing each one to spread across the country. That if is the best system no believer in democracy can well doubt; but the entire collapse of free governments, for the time being, in Colo- rado is a flagrant instance of how far from satisfactory any system is. Self-govern- ment can not be given by a system. It can only be made possible. In order to se- cure and preserve it, a community must stand higher morally than Colorado does at present. To the Shame of Civilized Governments. From the London Times. For at least half a century European been telling Oriental nations that their only hope of salvation lies in adopting Western habits of thought and Western civilization. In order to enforce the lesson | Euorope has invaded their territories, slain their people, annexed their revenues and taken possession of their soil. Ope of these Oriental nations has taken the advice of Europe. It has mastered the ways of Western civilization with extraordinary completeness, thus showing at once that it is very difierent from other yellow races, and that it is anxious to profit by our secular efforts for its regeneration. Yes, as soon as it accepts our advice, and complies with our cherished notions of progress- iveness and intelligence, Europe turns around and denounces it as a menace to peace and civilization. For a thousand years that nation has enjoyed a civilization of its own, which has produced a physical and moral education now triumphantly en- during the severest tess that can be ap- plied. It meddled with nobody, and is asked of the world nothing but to be let alone. Europe would not leave it alone, and it was wise enough to learn from what went on in its vicinity thas European in- terference would go on increasing in pro- portion to its possession of shings covet- able. Now that it can protect itself by European methods against the aggression of a European nation, it is declared to be the natural enemy of all the other Earo- pean nations, which have been living in fear of its opponent. How wise, how rea- sonable, how disinterested, and how entire- ly noble must Europe appear in that na- tion’s eyes! ‘ The Reasons. From Address of Gov. Folk of Mo. While bad men take an active interest in politics, in large cities especially, many good men do not like to mix in politics. They make a mistake in this. In our country every citizen should be a politician in the sense that he takes an active inter- est in the selection of those who represent the people in an official capacity. Too many men do not realize the priceless priv- ilege of American citizenship. They for- ges the blood and treasure that it has cost. Men have given up their lives in order that they might have this right, and any man who is a man would give up his life rather than lose it. Yet how carelessly many of us exercise the ballot ; how indif- ferent many of us are whether we use it or not. Bad men are united ; they always vote; good men are divided. Some of them vote and some do not. If good men would only join in patriotic endeavor the bad, be- ing in the minority, would not be able to accomplish anything. It Took Stremuous Work to Save Josiar. From the Clearfield Republican. Ex-Honorable Josiar Hicks had a ter- rible time re-electing himself chairman of the Blair county Republican committee last Saturday. The bludgeon and all other kinds of weapons bad to be employ- ed before the delegates could be ‘‘persuad- ed’’ to support Josiar. ——Just now there is unusual agitation in Bellefonte over the advisability of ac- oepting or rejecting the Pruner bequest for a friendless children orphanage. There is no doubt but that the special committee of council will be glad for all the informa- tion they can obtain on the subject rela- tive to the sentiment of oar people. ——The county correspondents are re- porting that snakes have made their ap- Spawls from the Keysione. ~The Lock Haven and Gleasonton brick companies have been consolidated. —The Milton council has adopted a resolu- tion that its proceedings shall hereafter be opened with prayer. —John H. Grumbine, formerly of Centre Hall, has been made Noble Chief of a new castle K. G. E., recently instituted at Vinton- dale, Cambria county. —Fire Sunday morning in Williamsport destroyed the Weed block and badly damaged the Gazette and Bulletin building, causing a total loss of $100,000. —Dairyman T. B. Wetzel, of Clinton coun- ty, is authority for the information that we have had 33 snows this last winter, the first one falling on November 26th. —Griffin Garrett, of Lock Haven, has been awarded the contract to build a new Presby- terian church at Midckeyville, to take the place of the one burned down last fall, —Thomas Gibson, a driver in the Beech Creek Coal company’s No. 12 mine at Patton, was instantly killed about 7 o’clock Thurs- day morning by the falling of a huge rock from the mine roof. —The record for immigrant traffic through Altoona last week was ninety-two cars, or about 6,000 persons. Twenty-two car loads went west Saturday morning. They wers mostly Italians and Polanders. —Peter McNish, whose parents reside at Drane, was instantly kiiled in the steel works at Conemaugh one day last week. His remains were brought home and interred at Osceola. He was 23 years of age. —Westley Spires, an old railroad man at Gallitzin, has been retired and placed on the pension list. He had been in the service of the company since 1866, and for years had charge of the old Allegheny tunnel, just east of Gallitzin. —The Clearfield and Huntingdon Tele- phone company has purchased the plant of the Cresson Telephone company, controlling nearly all lines in the north of the county. It is said that the consideration was in the neighborhood of $25,000. ~The Farmers and Merchants’ National bank, of Tyrone, is one of the six financial institutions that has been recently added to the list of State depositories by State Treas- urer Mathews. The amount to be given by the State to this new State depository is $25,000. —John C. Walton, of Pittsburg, after five minutes conversation with his wife, Sunday night, killed her by cutting her throat with a razor and then,after cutting his own throat, walked to the office of a physician, 300 yards distant, and expired just as police officers were about to place him under arrest. —The remains of George Kline, the aged man who strangely disappeared from the home of his son on Wilson street in Wil- liamsport, a ltttle over a year ago, were found on Sunday afternoon on the hillside near Sulphur Springs. The discovery was made by two boys—August Ball and Ray- mond Barnes. —Miss Mary Strack, of York, has fully recovered from an operation for the removal ‘of a one-hundred pound tamor, the largest on record. Before she was placed on the operating table she weighed one-hundred and seventy-two pounds. She now weighs ninety pounds. She has gained eighteen pounds since the operation. —Mrs. Mary Maurer, of Northumberland, a widow, fell asleep Tuesday evening while warming her feet in the oven of her kitchen stove. While she was sleeping her clothing caught fire and she was burned almost to a crisp. A daughter of Mrs. Maurer committed suicide several weeks ago by jumping in the river because she was the subject of some neighborhood gossip. —Fifteen locomotives, making seventeen carloads, passed through Altoona Friday night en route to Seattle, Wash., from which point they will be shipped to Japan. The engines were built by the Baldwin locomo- tive works, of Philadelphia, according to a contract with the Japanese government. They have three pairs of driving wheels and are among the heaviest patterns made. —Ralph W. Kline, of Lancaster, aged 26 years, an artist, was fatally stabbed Sunday afternoon by Jennie Good, aged 18. Kline and Miss Good were members of a party, whe were fishing in the Little Conestago, near Leng Park. Kline and the girl had a quarrel, during which Miss Good threatened to cut his heart out. Thinking that she wounld not execute her threat, Kline threw ont his chest and told her tostab. She did, plung- ing a knife into his breast, near the heart. —It is stated that the Goodyear Lumber company, with headquarters at Galeton, Pot- ter county, has purchased 250,000 acres of Louisiara timber lands and that the work of manufacturing on a large scale will eom- mence this season. The estimated cut is upwards of 2,000,000,000 feet and the propos- ed rate of manufacture is 300,000 ft. daily. It is thought that the tract cannot be stripped in less time than 30 years. Two mills each with a daily output of 150,000 feet are to be erected not far from New Orleans. A num- ber of Clearfield county woodsmen will go to these southern operations. —The body of Trevette T. Bubb, of Jersey Shore, who escaped from his attendant one day last week, was found in the river at that place about 300 yards below the river bridge Friday ncon. The body was discovered along shere, where it had lodged in a clump of bushes, by Edward Harris and Frank Keyser, who will receive the $50 reward which was offered. Bubb, it will Le remem- bered, made two unsuccessful attempts at suicide before, and it is believed jumped from the river bridge this last time. He was aged 49 years. For some years past he had been afflicted with locomotor ataxia. —What is said to be the oldest and largest buck ever killed in Blair county, and evi- dently the patriarch of the herd of deer which ranges Tussey mountain, met an ignominious and untimely end in the vicinity of Williamsburg on Wednesday last, being pulled down by dogs almost within sight of the town, after a long chase. The body of this magnificent monarch of the forest, half torn to pieces by his savage assailants, was discovered on a farm a short distance south- east from that town, Thursday. The head, a splendid trophy, with ten-prong antlers, was recovered by the citizens of Williamsburg pearance, especially the blacksnake. and is said to be of unusual size and beauty.