A BY P. GRAY MEEK. ———————————————— Ink Slings. —There is nothing doing in county poli- tios. : —Here’s hoping that they really were the bones of JoHN PAUL JONES that we made sach a fuss over. —An extra session of Congress is to be called in November. I'he Good Lord de- liver us from the evils thereof ! — The steam road roller didn’t havea very pleasant experience during its first day in Bellefonte. Did it, Hey? —It Mr. ROCKERFELLER has really corn- ered the flaxseed market it is up to our un- ole RUSSELL SAGE to get busy on the sledge hammers. —Allentown was reported as being the hottest city in the State last week. Why, only last week? We have always heard it spoken of as ‘‘the hottest place’’in Penn- sylvania, winter or summer. 3 —The weather permitting tomorrow night the people of Bellefonte will be call- ed upon to make their choice between the wind jammers and the men who produce dulces tones from the entrails of deceased cats. —Ot course it was to be expected that the Navy Department would be too busy building new boats and keeping down the lid on scandals in Washington to look after the boilers of the Bennington on the far off Pacific. —Up to the present time the only dis- tinction between a little grafter and a big grafter was that the big grafter was never punished. They are gradually getting on- $0 the same level, however, which is a most wholesome sign. —Notwithssanding tbe statement of pres: ent encambents that the county offices are scarcely worth having the cool weather of the early fall will find a bunch of inquisi- tive candidates hustling to get in to find out for themselves. —The smiling Japs may talk all they please ab out their admiration for M. WITTE and Baron ROSEN, the Russian peace en- voys, but when the time comes to settle they will make them step upto the captain’s o fice and pay good and plenty. —It the County Commissioners imagine they can stand for it before the tax payers of the county the York Bridge Co. certain- ly can’t afford to risk its reputation for satisfactory work by leaving the brick on the Race bridge in this place as they are. —1T¢ is altogether probable that if some of the ‘Peach Colonels’ who are running the National Guard had to do a little of the running and pulling themselves while in eamp there wonldn’t now be so many tales of brutally treated horses to shock the hu- mane people of the State. —All this talk ahont what PENROSE will agree to and what he won't agree to seems to be a waste of good wind. Does it mas- ter much what pleases him in the reorgani- zation of the Republican party in this State? He is a dead one now and should be given no chance of coming to life again. —Though our fr iend Tom COOPER'S red locks have grown gray and it would ecarce- ly be true to call him ‘‘red headed’ any- more who is there, after reading his sug- gestions for reform within his party, who will deny him the ‘‘hopeful’’ end of his old time soubriquet: ‘‘Red headed and Hopeful CooPER.”’ —The government statistics that are used to show that only seventeen regular army officers of the United States have been’ drunk in the past fifteen years probably draw the same fine lice of distinction that. we heard a few days ago when it wasde- clared that ‘‘gentlemen never get drurk, they only become exhilerated.” —We can set the mind of the world to rest on one of the things that the Kaiser said $o the Czar during their recent confer- ence, because we are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that he said the same thing to him that the Governor of North Carolina once said to the Governor of South Carolina. —The fat lady who caused a panie in a Pittsburg store on Taesday, by fainting in the midst of a bargain sale crush, had | things all ber own way when she rolled down the stairs. Perhaps if she bad not weighed three hundred pounds she might have been badly crushed as were some of the others she bowled out of the way. —The conviction and sentence to six months imprisonment of U. 8. Senator MITCHELL, of Oregon, will piobably pre- olude that eminent rascal from ever having a monument erected to his memory in the capitol park as Salem. Now'had he hap- pened to have escaped she: imprisonment part of it he might have: shared alike fame with his departed’ piers in ori from Pennsylvania. —Mr PAUL MORTON, ‘the So ead of the Equitable Life assurance society, is credited with baving voluntarily. reduced his own salary from $100,000 to $75,000 per year. If the report is true the act can be looked upon as an acknowledgment that his services are not worth the fabulous price set by the directors of that mis-man- aged corporation. Neither has Mr. Mog- TON made the cut large enough, for meas- ured by what many amother man of equal ability—but probably not as much nosorie- ty—would be able to do for the Equitable for a sum one fifth as large, it is an abso- late imposgibility for him to rendered serv- ice $0 that corporation that will be worth $75,000 per annum. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 50 Will Stick to Plummer. The PENROSE-DURHAM-McNICHOL ma- chine has determined, obviously, to hold on to the last hope of restoration to power. That is to say ,we infer from the tone of the machine press of the State thas the purpose is 0 continue J. LEE PLUMMER on the Re- publican ticket throughout the campaign. Here and there we find a newspaper of that politizal faith with intelligence and courage enough to protest. For example, the Pitts- burg Times in a recent issue unequivocally demanded the withdrawal of PLUMMER. He ‘‘was never the choice of the Republicans of Pennsylvania,’’ our Pittsburg ocontem- porary declares. ‘‘They were never con- sulted about his nomination,’’ it adds. “He was merely the choice of the men who run Philadelphia and bad run the Legisla- ture in which he was their willing, obedi- ent servant.”’ Nevertheless the machine leaders have determined to allow him to remain on the ticket. The graft which it is possible to get out of the farming of the ten or twelve million dollar surplus in the treasury is sufficent enticement to justify some risks, and as a matter of fact shere are ‘no risks in the policy they have determined upon, lit- erally speaking, for the election of a Repub- lican whom the people will support under existing conditions will be quite as bard on them as the election of the Democratic can- didate. In other words, in either event the graft would be cut off, and as the machine managers have no political convictions, a Republican who will not ‘‘divy’”’ is no more desirable to them than a Democrat who will serve the State honestly. What they want is the money and that secured they care for nothing else. All things considered we understand why the machine managers have adopted this notion. What's the advantage to PENROSE, DurHAM and MceNICHOL to elect an honest Republican to the office of State Treasurer or any other office. They don’t know much about political principles and outside of PENROSE, who has acquired at least the rudimentary principles of law, it is safe to say that not one in the bunch knows what are the differences between the Republican and the Democratic parties, or why they happen to be Republicans instead of Demo- crats outside of the fact that it is more profitable a Republican than a Demo- crat. They ulderstand that there is a re- mote possibility of electing PLUMMER. There are a gopd many Republicans so prej- udiced that they would vote for a bad Re- publican rather than a good Democrat and there are a considerable number of machine men who feel that they must stick togeth- er or go to jail separately. These two ele- ments agree in the purpose of keeping PLUMMER on the ticket and as they con- trol the party it may as well be assumed that they will have their way. That PLUMMER will be defeated no in- telligent man doubts but what of that? It’s no worse for the machine to have him defeated as the candidate of its own choice than to have a Republican elected who would administer the office according to law and in the interest of the people. In either event they are absolutely outside of the profits of the office. They realize that there is no reasonable probability of the election of PLUMMER. But they have the instincts of a gambler and understand that there have been instances in which the horse with a longlead would break down on the home-stretch and allow his less speedy competitor to win. In sticking to PLUMMER the managers are simply taking those chances. They have nothing to lose and everything to win by sticking to PLUMMER and they will do that il he is proven guilty of the most obnoxious crimes. A Fruitless Labor. The Civil Service Reform association of Pennsylvania has begun an investigation of the political activities of Mr. Ww. S. Lies, of Rotfeville, Assistant United States Treasurer at Philadelphia. All sorts of stories have been current for half a dozen years or more implicating MR. LIEB in violations of the Civil Service reform laws and 1 aticns. It has been openly charged that he bas compelled employes of the government to contribute to the campaign corruption fund : for the state and county committees. Recently he has been charged with extorting unreasonable | sums from candidates’ and appropriating the money to his own use and the acousa- tion has not been denied. But we don’t think it’s worth while for the State Civil Service Reform association to waste time investigating the matter. After its investigation is completed and the facts developed the association will be without power to enforce the penalties. Of course the association can appeal to the county courts as a private prosecutor if the state criminal code bas been violated. But such a process is vastly laborious, some- what expensive and generally froitiess. It is possible that the association might sum- mon the accused into the Federal courts but that proceeding wonld promise little better results. The only effective course BELLEFONTE, PA., JULY 28, 1905. is a proceeding by the Federal Civil Service association. In this fact lies the safety of such men as LIEB. We have no doubt that he is guilty on every charge preferred against him. In fact he has practically confessed and with the assurance of the Mr. TWEED added ‘‘what are yon going to do about it?” The Federal Civil Service reform as- sociation is abou$ the most arrant humbug that ever was organized in this broad land. It will interfere if any Democrats who happened to hold over under the classified regulations get busy in politics. But ever since she elevation of ROOSEVELT to the Presidency the association has been more inclined to encourage = than discourage pernicious activity in behalf of the Repub- lican party. Berks County for Stewart. The Berks county delegates to the Dem- ocratio State convention, which will reas- semble at Harrisburg on the 16th ot Au- gust, have announced their intention of vot- ing for Justice STEWART for Justice of the Supreme court. Such a course, they say, will promote non-partisanship on the bench advance political morality and ultimately benefit the State and the party. The Berks delegation numbers fifteen, the county ap- pears well up on the roll and its unanimous vote for STEW ART would have considerable effect on the resnlt even if there were a substantial opposition to the policy they have declared. Partisanship bas no place on the bench but unfortunately it has usurped several seats. This has been shown in the decisions on every partisan question during recent years. Since Governor STONE'S office boy ‘‘electioneered’’ the Supreme court in order to get a decision affirming the constitation- ality of the Pittsburg ‘‘ripper’’ no political question has been decided on its] merits, The late Justice DEAN, who was a conscien® tious Republican and a just judge,and Jus- tice MESTREZAT have been on one side wit h all the Republicans, ‘ ‘catapulted’’and otherwise, on the other. But we believe th at Justice STEWART measures up to the high standard of DEAN and therefore Dem- ocrats may consistently vote for him. We have no doubt that the understand- ing of these facts have influenced the Berks delegates to their declaration in fa. vor of STEWART. At least we know that a large majority of the Democrats all over the State are for justice STEWART and pre- cisely for that reason. But there is another reason, less important, probably,but worth considering. The nomination of Justice STEWART by the Democrats will be good politios because it will concentrate all the partisan energy of the Democrats and in- dependent Republicans into the fight against that atrocious ringster, J. LEE, PLUMMER, the machine-made candidate for State Treasurer. An Absent Scheme. The Railroad Commissioners of Georgia, it JosepE M. BROWN, one of the members of the hoard correctly expresses their pur- poses, are going to do wonderful things. That is according to our esteemed contem- porary, the Savannah News, Mr. BROWN has declared that it is the ‘‘policy of the commission to protect the manufacturers of the State against outside manufacturers.” The plan by 3which this purpose is to be achieved is not revealed in Mr. BROWN'S statement, but presumably it is to discrim- inate in transportation charges against the outsiders. That is to say, the freight rates for Georgia manufacturers, coming and go- ing, will be less than those for manufactnr- ers of other States. The Federal constitution forbids the Tous ing of a tariff tax upon commerce between the States and as the policy proposed by Mr. BROWN wuald be equivalent to such levy it is not easy to gee how such a policy can be maintained. But even if it were possible reprisals would be certain to fol- low and other States, by adopting similar policies, would make the enterprise exceed- ingly expensive to the Georgia manufac turers. They have some advantages, it is true, in raw materials. That is they have coal, cotton, ore and timber within the borders of the State. But what good would that do them if their market for the sale of the product of their mills were confifed to the State. The truth is that Railroad Commissioner BROWN has entirely misconceived the pur-; pose of the offi ce he has been ' called to oc- cupy. Railroad Commissoners are to pre- vent discriminations in freight rates rather than create them. ‘Besides the federal law prohibiting discriminations ‘would ‘be in- voked against the Georgia railroad commis- sioners the firs§ time they undertook to en- force such policy. Still the statement of | Commissioner BROWN - has ' served a good purpose. It has shown to the public bow absolutely absurd a man can be and yet get into an important office. In addition to that it reveals the great danger of too much government interference with business that ought to be private. Ballot Frauds in Philadelphia. There is nothing more interesting in the papers these days than the record of the frandulent registration of voters in Phila- delphia. When the investigation was be- gun under the orders of the new Director of Pablic Safety a geod many people langh- ed at what they regarded a farce. We own that we were among the number and in view of what has since happened we are not quite able to be ashamed of the fact. That is to say,according to the summary of the result of the work of about two weeks it bas been officially announced that some- thing more than 37,000 names have been stricken from the registry lists. Asa mat- ter of fact that is less than half the number that ought to have been stricken off and will be when a real investigation is made. Beginning with th. First ward, the re- port of the police authorities assert, and ending with the Thirteenth, considerably more than half the registered list of voters represented bogus names. In the wards in which the leaders lived, the men who con- trol the politics of the city, and State, the the greatest frands have been revealed. For example.in the Fifth ward in which State Harbor Mastor MALONEY resides three- fourths of the registry was bogus. MALON- EY was appointed by Governor PENNY- P ACKER and is the intimate friend of that marvelous old{false pretender. During the last session of the Legislature his salary was increased a couple of thousand dollars and PENNYPACKER gigued the hill, not- withstanding its unconstitutionality. The increase was his reward for manipglating the registry. The Seventh ward is the home of DUR- HAM. It comes next to the Fifth in the pum ber of fraudulent votes registered. The Eighth ward in which Senator PENROSE resides and directs the political operations is third in the iniquitous list. The Thir- teenth ward is the bailiwick of Sheriff MILES, who is also chairman of the Repub- lican city committee. It is fourth in the list of fraudulent voting districts and didn’t have the opportunities of the others. But all taken together reveal a condition which should appall the State and make clear to any intelligent observer the reasons for the vast Republican majority of Pennsylvania. We don’t go so far as to say that Republi- (an candidates would have been defeated at recent elections on an honest vote but we will say that majorities would have been vastly redaced. Fooling the People. We can imagine nothing more ahsurd than the calling of an extra session of Con- gress about the middle of November for the purpose of initiating legislation for the regulation of railroads or for any other pur- pose. It is palpably a false pretense and the President must think that the people are dummies who can be fooled by any subterfuge or he wouldn’s play such a trick on them. The middle of November is only about three weeks ahead of the regular time for the assembling of Congress. With- in that period of time the organization can be effeoted and some bills introduced. But it is impossible to get any legislation against which there is opposition even as far as the calendar in that time. It is true that legislation introduced dur- ing the brief special session will take its place on the calendar and remain alive for the regular session. Bnt it won’t be ad- vanced sufficiently to give it advantage over legislation introduced during the first few days of the regular session. Obviously therefore the special session is not for the purpose of promoting railroad rate legisla- tion. It is rather for the purpose of deceiv- ing the people into the belief that the Presi- dent is exceedingly zealous for that sort of legislation, whereas as a matter of fact he is as much the obedient servant of the rail roads as any man who has ever occupied the office. When the President directed ts As. torney General to disregard the recom- mendation of special counsel that criminal proceedings be instituted against the officers of the Santa Fe railroad he revealed not only his absolute insincerity with respect’ to that subject bat his ‘all around hum- buggery. The orime had been confessed and the guilt fastened on PAUL MORTON, atthe time Secretary of the Navy. In order $0 shield MORTON the President issued the absurd order that the corporation be prose-. '| outed as ifit were possible to puta oorpora- tion in jail. Nothing further is needed ‘to show that THEODORE ROOSEVELT is an arrant bumbug and a hypocrite, = More- over he is fooling nobody now. f e———— While Dr. WARREN is maki such a fuss over the outrages practiced on the peo- ple: ‘of Pennsylvania by the Beef trast we would respectfully call his attention to the fact that Pennsylvania once issned a bird book that is said to hase been slightly adulterated The removal of the famous old ‘‘Yel- low mansion from Broad St., Philadelphia, won’t blot out the last trace of “‘yellow’’in that city. of reor, NO. 29. Democratic Party’s | Ups and Downs, From the Washington Post Post. Our fine old friend, the Democratic pathy; seems to have dropped into cogitation, and- not even the glorious victory of uncle Tom Davis has aroused the sometimes admirable, the efttimes aggravating, the always inter- esting,and always ‘‘unserrified’’ racy from its meditation of ‘men, things and events. And whats a wonderful old party it is, or was! Now a Roger de Coverly, now a Squire Western, as knightly and as cranky as Barca Bradwardine, as simple and as soe Uncle Toby, it is, after all, the real G. O. P. What other party could have taken a titbe of the punishment it has with- stood? What other party could bave sur- vived the pars it played in the war of 1861- 65? What other party could have survived its insanity of 1896, to say Roshing. of its repetition of it in 1900? In 1864 a war candidate on a pease plat form; in 1868 a goldbug on'a rag ‘money platform; in 1872 Horace Greely an il nvet- erate and lifelong enemy—these are some of its consistencies. No other party could have blundered into a forfeiture of the vio- tory it gained in 1892. Indeed it reminds one of that not unkindred spirit, David L. Graves, of Kentucky, a Peveril- sort of a man, who, when les moth Cave, fenced off the property shut out a stage company tha y brought guests to his hotel , and visitors to his cave—all because he fell out with and shot the stage driver. ‘In 1892 Grover Cleveland was the stage driver the Demo- cratio party fenced off. Men have ianghed at the old party, dis- trusted it, abused it even; but nobody has hated it. It has been guilty of a thousand follies, but never of a single crime. It bas reverenced the Constitution, however er- roneous may have been its interpretations of that sacred instrument. Its ins are patriotic, its impulses good, and" had its wisdom been equal to its honesty it would have huried its rival long ago. i a Nobody knows what the futuré ~hasin | store for the old party. It may disintegrate and then, like another Antaeosi§ may be- come stronger than ever forits ¢ $ with mother earth. : Meanwhile it is the other G. o. P. that is walking the floor these nights, and next winter; the nights promise to be Tong a and olefu Clean as a Hound’s Tooth, Eh? From the Columbia Independent. ‘‘A Public official should be clean as a hound’s tooth,’’ said President Roosevelt early in his administration. But the Pres- ident has made a sad departure from that high standard for public officials, of late. He has attempted to vindicate Paul Mor- ton, Secretary of the Navy, without due process of law, he has -dismisied former Minister Bowen bat retained. igtant Secretary of State Loomis, afte "Loomis has been proven to have invested in Venez: uelan securities, while Minister to that country, and lately he exalted Loomis by making him a special ambassador to France to receive the body of John Paul Jones, and arranged that Mr. Loomis’ European vacation shall cost him nothing by giving him a commission to investigate the American diplomatic posts in Europe. The President’s bold stand for railway rate legislation won for him the respect of Americans irrespective of party and many there were who hoped that we had return- ed to the early days of the republic, at least to the extent of having a non-partisan Pres- ident. The President’s sourageous stand with regard to the tariff hogs who are standing “‘with their feet in the trough’’ added to the hosts of his admirers,although his tariff reform position was soon abandon- ed. It may still be that Democrats in Congress will have to support the President in his campaign against ‘‘the railroads which monopolize the great railroads of the country,” but no admirer of Theodore Roosevelt can but regres that he shonld have so departed from his high ideals as he has done in the Morton,the Bowen and the Loomis cases. In Pennsylvania. From the New York Sun. ; For years it has been the practice of the Republican boss of Philadelphia to occupy. the office of State Commissioner of Insnr- "ance and therefore the resignation of the Honorable Izzy Durham will be accepted as formal announcement of his deposition from supreme authority in the party. Governor Pennypacker, in accepting Dar- bam’s resignation, wrote that the Commis- sioner’s inattention to his duties bad been overlooked becanse there was hope ‘‘for the restoration of his health.”” . Whatever Durbam’s physical condition may be, be has failed amazingly in political health in the last few weeks, and. there is evidence | that the Hon. Boies Penrose is not so strong as hewas. From various parts. of Pennsylvania comes news that "ag Philadelphia revolt against Durbar created no feeling of re-. morse amo hog B Ee rao EL 2 is ta e Machine wh oh § I: Penrc e inherited from Senator Quay Quay. Mr, Quay’s Machine was built for ‘onch of emer-. genoy as ib arose. It isa question bari whether his successors can follow sno: tally the lig of that “political w Pei veyly nia Repu blicans AHS znd. | boat and venciate a Machine. If the Quay heirs are to be pus out of business some one muss take their place. © Will it be Senator Knox, late of Pittsburg? Or is there another man now quietly preparing to BE hus ‘No Reform from rom Pennypacker. w From the New York World, 4 Philadelphia need have no illusions. - in may olamor for honest government. It may demand that public thieves be sent to jail. It may seek to free itself from the olutehes of the corrupt Republican Machine Bat it must not look for aid or comfort: from Governor Pennypacker. Its Studions Arts. From the Commoner. That Chicago grand jury managed to| give the names of a few corrupt labor lead- ers while skilfully concealing the names of the wealthy merchants who put up the} . | money. " Spawls from the Keystone. a - —A fire at Cameron, last week, destroyed two million feet of lumber before the flames conld be extinguished. —A grain of corn was removed from the windpipe of a two-year-old boy at Shamokin, a few days ago, by a hospital surgeon. —The Pittsburg Railways company on Saturday bought the thirty-two miles of the ‘| Beaver Valley Traction company for $1,000,- 000. . —Out of 293 teachers who took the recent examinations in Armstrong county 286 were granted certificates; and 250 of this number were residents of the county. —Jersey Shore will within a few days be able to boast of possessing something that hardly any other town of its size in the State has—all night street car service. —William Habroyd, aged 25 years, on Sunday shot and killed his girl wife, 17 years of age, then sent a bullet through kis own heart, dying instantly. ! —The Villa Marie convent at New Bed- ford, Pa., was damaged about $600 by light- ning. Several sisters’ were stunned, but none was seriously injured. —Notwithstanding the efforts of a girl who tried to save him, a valuable hunter dog be- longing to Isaac Yoder, of Niantic, near Boyertown, was stung to death by a swarm of bees Wednesday. —The plants of the American Sheet and Tin Plate company, at Leechburg, Hyde Park, Vandergrift and Saltsburg are all to be enclosed with high fences to keep outa curious public. —Three boys, foreigners, have been ar- rested at Johnstown charged with burglariz- ing a wholesale liquor store. When arrested the boys had in their possession $140, the amount missing from the store. —Because a cow refused to get off the track a freight train was wrecked on the new Portage railroad, near Duncansville, on Sun- day, causing the death of one brakeman and the serious injury of another. —Samuel N. Mumma, of near Mt. Joy, raised eight hundred bushels of wheat on a twenty-acre tract this year. This average yield of forty bushels to the acre is one of the largest in the history of Lancaster county. . —While he was loading icesthe first day he worked for the Citizen’s Ice company, at Altoona on Thursday, a 300 pound cake slip- ped and fell on Thaddeus Keide, aged 38 years. He died of the resultant injuries. —Jesse Tomlinson, a brakeman on the Middle division of the Pennsylvania rail- ‘road, sat down on the railroad track near Mifflin, Saturday morning, fell asleep and was run over by his own train and instantly killed. * —Thomas Stout,a resident of Jersey Shore, was found dead in the hay loft of Shuman’s livery stable at that place one day last week. He had evidently spent the night there and must have died from cramps. He was about 40 years of age. . —Altoona has been selected as the place for the meeting of the Pennsylvania Edu- cational Asoociation next year. The school authorities expect to have the new High school building sufficiently completed that the convention may be held there. —Governor Pennypacker has not yet sign- ed the death warrant or set the execution date. of Mrs. Kate Edwards, though it is three weeks since the board of pardons de- clined to interfere in her case. It is thought by seme that he does not intend to do so at all, thus saving the woman from the gallows. —Attorney General Hampton L. Carson has furnished State factory inspector John C. Delaney with an opinion that employing school boys for the distribution of news- papers is not the ‘‘regular’ employment sought to be regulated by the child labor act of 1905, and does not violate either the letter or the spirit of this law. —Tuesday morning of last week Stephen B. Patterson, an old war veteran aged 72 years, left his home at Dorsey ore mines to walk to Tyrone to get his pension voucher. He failed to return and a search resulted in the finding of his dead body in a field of the David Waite farm. There was no sign of foul play, the man evidently having died from paralysis. The remains were buried at Warriorsmark. —Work on grading for the Pittsburg and Westmoreland trolley line between Me-’ Keesport and Irwin has been suspended on account of farmers being engaged in harvest- ing. The company is doing its own work and hired farmers and their teams to haul the earth from the cuts being made along the line. Soon as grain was ready to cut the men left the job, a few each day, and today not a team is on the work. —William Griffiths, of West Pittston, Lan- caster county, the well-known mining engi- neer and geologist, will sail on August 1st for Southwest Alaska to explore and. report for a company of American capitalists on the possibilities of the Matanuska coal fields be- ing developed to supply the prospective great Pacific trade with coal for steam purposes. It is said that there is an immense vein of bituminous. coal there and that it is of a superior quality. —The large new saw mill of John E. Du- Bois, at Hicks Run, started up the other day. The erection of the mill has been 'go- is talk | ingon sinee spring and it has been made a omplete plant. There is approximate- ‘hundred million feet of lumber to cut, fifteen t to twenty million, a year. There is probably. no. more complete ; , plant, or one ‘| having ‘the assurances of a longer r run in the State, than the Hicks Run mill. i “prank Vessig, of Shatokin, ‘intedlod with his wife after he had “received pay at a colliery, about the proper distribution of the, . coin,; She wanted a certain amount and he would not give it to. her. He finally said he would huxl his money in the Shamokin creek before he. would submit. He went to the | stream and threw about $75in the water. A big crowd of men’ ‘and boys drag the creek for ‘the more. | Several ‘bills ‘were Tecov- ered. Ney : ~—Jobn C. Portes sof a ny who is mentally unbalanced, ' was arrested shortly | after midnight Friday morning at the White : & for attempting’ to scale the high iron nce around the grounds, and insisting upon ing the President, who is at Oyster Bay, He resisted arrest, and awed the officer on. duty by pointing to a little green bag he car- Tied and declared that it contained a power ‘ful explosive and enough to blow up every I politeman on earth.