EIN th, ER AO STOMP ne Se RO _", ay . BY P. GRAY MEEK. ink Slings. —Thank Heavens, the coal strike has come just a little too late to be the cause of another little boost in the price of steam heat. —Treasurer-elect BERRY wants fusion with the Independents on a nominee for Governor. WILLIAM knows how he got there. —The time is uear at band when the rolled-up sleeves fad will begin to cheat the laundryman out of his price for wash- ing cuffs. —How heartless TEDDY is! To throw that barpooned muck-rake into poor old Joux D. jostat a time when he is feeling so badly. —The sympathy of the civilized world will go ont to the citizens of California who have been injured by the awlul earth. quake disaster of Wednesday morning. —Between war depleted Russia, famine stricken Japan and Vesuvius devastated Italy we ought to get our share of the im- migrant business during the early sum- mer. —“The Man With the Muck Rake” probably won’s last as long as ‘‘the Man With the Hoe,”’ but jast at this season of the year there is a chance for both of them to get busy. —The London woman who killed her- self by tight lacing will not be missed much. If she bad eo little sense as to do such a thing she had too little to fill any useful sphere in this life. —DOWIE has the other bosses who bave been run to cover lately skinned a mile. He is to be kicked out just the same as they were, but he is also to get a million, whereas most of the others bave bad to ‘‘give np.” —Statistics prove that brain-workeis are loog-lived bat that shouldn't necessarily delude the editors of some papers and the teachers of some schools and some lawyers we know of into thinking they will be hanging on here after many others are gone. —CHARLES P. DONNELLY, of Philadel phia, is the new chairman of the Pennsyl- vania Democracy. He bas the ability and experience to make a good one if he exer- cises both the qualities Le displayed so mar kedly in the Philade!phia campaign last fall, —A Youngstown, Ohio, man who is suing for divorce from his wife gives as one of his reasons that ‘‘she is too slow.” As he also recites in his bill that she stuck him several times with a table fork we pre- sume that he liked that little pastime of hers and she didn’t do it fast enough. ~The ramor that ARCHIE ALLISON is an aspirant for the Bellefonte postoffice hae no foundation. ARCHIE knows he would have no show because the plans have all been made : Judge LovE is to go to Congress and then he is to make our friend HARTER postmaster. This is official, because ToM made the plan himself. —The Daughters of the Revolution are again in National Congress in Washington and, as usual, are keeping up ancestral reputations by stirring op another big fight. It is a nice little question to con- jure with as to whether such a hody of women by any other name would always be at Joggerheads over somethivg. —With Tox PLATT'S announced inten- tion of retirement at the end of his present term in the Senate comes TEDDY'S wish that he could get into that body after PLATT is through. My what a time they would have in the upper branch of Con- gress with “Pitchfork BEN’ and “Muck Rake TEDDY both doing business on the strenuous side. —Again Governor FOLK gets through with the leaders of that Springfield mob it is probable that lynching parties won't be as popular as they once were in Mis- souri. Of course there are crimes that nothing but a lynching seems to expiate, bat that neither justifies nor makes lynch- ings anything else than a dangerous infrac- tion of the laws. —~80 Maxim GORKY, the great Russian patriot, is traveling with ‘‘a lady’’—not his wile! And MAXIM was probably one of the loudest claquers against the Russian army because it was found that many of its officers were paying more attention to the ladiesaround Muokden and Port Arthur than they were to strengthening the de. fenses of the places. ~The Philadelphia Public Ledger thinks it ‘a queer notion that the biggest ship in the navy shonld be named after a wee State that supports a single Senator.’ What a poor argument. Everyone knows that to even get that one Senator the ‘wee State’’ goes through things more akin to real war-fare than all the other States in the Union put together would have to go through iu chosing a million Senators. —When the Democrats, in 1894, passed the WiLsox income tax a Republican Sa preme court declared it uncovstitutional aod Republicans in general eplit their throats crying that it was sooialistie, in. quisitorial, eto. Since the Republican Presi dent of these same United Etates has declared, in a public speech, “I feel that we shall ultimately have to consider the adoption of some such scheme as that of a progressive tax on all fortunes beyond a certain amount’’ what do these ranters of twelve years ago have to say? The first thing they know ROOSEVELT will be tak. ing Bryax and HEARST into his cabinet. Those wno imagine that President ROOSEVELT is yearning for the tranquility of private life are likely to have their im- pressions rudely disturbed unless the alert Washington correspondents are gravely mistaken. In other words, according toa Washington dispatch, published a few days ago, the President contemplates an exten- sive toar of the country daring the coming summer and it is a sale conjecture that if he makes such a trip daring the summer of 1906 he will be a candidate for re-elec- tion to the Presidency in 1908. This is the plain logic of events. One is the natural, not to say the inevitable, corrollary of the other. A presidential tour of the country is an enterprise of vast expense. We have the best authority for the statement that Pres- ident ROOSEVELT'S trip to the Yellowstone Park two years ago cost the Pennsylvania railroad $50,000 besides the expenses of the other roads over which his magnificent train passed free of the ordinary ‘‘wheel charges.” There is a tradition that all men are liberal with other people’s money and it is possible that that excursion cost more, because the railroad company was paying the bills, than it wonld under other cir- cumstances. Bat whether that be trae or not it is certain that a junket across the continent upon the scale of magnidcence of that of two years ago would cost more than any prudent man would be willing to spend unless he had an expectation of a re- turn of some kind. From their inception these presidential tours of the country bave been vothing more nor less than electioneering devices. Ol late years it may be said that they have been without expense to the party iuost directly interested and that if the expense had devolved on soch party they might have been on a less elaborate scale. The new railroad regulation against the courte- sy of free transportation to public officials if enforced will of necessity put the ex- pense of the contemplated trip on the President’s private parse and therefore it is a safe guess that if the luxury is indnlg- ed in it will be made an electioneering en- terprise, — Not so Grossly Unjast, Oar highly respected contemporary, the Philadelphia Record, is giving itsell need- less worry over the dangers to carrying cor- porations in the amendment to the rate hill proposed by Senator BAILEY, of Texas. It would be moss iniquitous, our Philadel- phia contemporary declares, to deny to one class of suitors, emer carriers, ‘‘the right that is enjoyed by all others in the courts of the United States.” This is really touching, but we regret that it is impossi- ble for us to bring oursell into syampathy with the proposition. We can’t divest our self from the impression that the particular class of suitors ih question have brought the trouble upon themselves, If any man ootside of the walls of an asylum should assert the claim that mur- derers are entitled to the enjoyment of lib- erty of person because it is guaranteed by the constitution to every American citizen, he would likely be laughed at for his pains. By the commission of the crime the murderer becomes au outlaw and is justly confined in’ a cell until trial by a properly constituted jury. These common carriers have similarly outraged every prin- ciple of justice and as Senator BAILEY sug- gest they deserve to be denied the legal rights of other suitors until by the regu- lar process of judicial inquiry they have established the eh which is inherent to suitors as a rule. | The common adelphia contem ly have outraged ers for whom our Phil- ry pleads so plaintive. e people eo long and so oruelly that they deserve to stand before the public as pi . If they get the right to hold up rates established by the Inter- state Commerce commission, pendivg a ju- dicial inquiry, they will hold it up until the shipper, having first exbausted his patience and his purse, has subsequently worried himself into his grave. According to the public prints there isa case of the kind now in the Philadelphia Federal court which was begun jeventeen years ago and is still far from a finish, In view of such facts why shouldn't some re- straints be considered ? ——The Woman's Christian Temperance Union, of Baltimore, are circulating a four- page pamphlet explanatory of and showing what it purports to be the great good of a Carfew law in a number of cities and towns in the United States. While there is hard- ly any doubt bat that good can be done hy such a law in possibly most every city and town in the country, the best Curfew that could be put in force anywhere wonld be a little more of the proper discipline by par- ents and there would be no need of any other law. 2 ——Housecleaning is now the order of the day and the head of more than one bounsehold in Bellefonte has the consequent good reason to take his lunch down town. "STATE RIGHTS AN Republicans are Alarmed. The Republicans in Congress are greatly alarmed, according to newspaper corres: pondents, over what they call Speaker Caxxox's indiscreet declaration on the tariff. It will be remembered that ‘Uncle Joe'’ asserted, a few days ago, that there will be no tariff revision as long as the Re- publicans continue to control legislation and that those Republicans or others who favored tariff revision might go to the Democrats, the dogs or the devil for con- solation. A good many Republicans now in the House, it appears, have secured their election by promising tariff revision and feel that if the statement of the Speaker is taken seriously, there will be nc possible chance of a re-election. “Uncle Jog,” it may be observed, doesn’t share in the idea tbat his candor may prove harmful to the party. On the contrary he seems to be entirely satisfied with himself. He reasons, with the late Mr. BARNUM, that the people like to be humbugged, and that the old, old story the Republican party means to do whates- er the people want will fool them this year, as it has deceived them so frequently in the past. Therefore he inferentially recommends them to pay no attention to what be has said but to go right ahead, as vsoal, and promise anything. Withont pride of opinion or qualms of conscience, the Speaker is ready for anything and feels, justly or otherwise, that his declara- tion will guarantee a fat campaign fand which will prove potent anyway. Some other Republicans of the House, men who bave adopted a different code of political ethics, are not disposed to tamely submit to this false position, us they call it, however, and Mr. PERKINS, of New York, made public protest in a speech the other day. ‘‘No one regards the schedules of the present law as sacred'’’ he said, which is probably trne. But a lot of fel- lows, besides the Speaker, regard their ob- ligations to the tariff pensioners as sacred and may depended upon to fulfill the Speaker's pledge as long as their party is in control of the House organization. The only certain remedy is, as ‘Uncle Joe” suggested, to vote for Demooratic candi- dates for Congress. The testimony in the REED SMooT case is all in and the arguments on both sides have been heard, but the end of the affair is not yet in sight. Printed briefs are yet to be presented to the committee and as the attorneys have other things to attend to it is impossible to say when they will be able to give the matter attention. Meanwhile the Mormon Apostle continues to occupy the seat in ‘‘the greatest legislative body in the world,” and exercise all the preroga- tives of a Senator of the United States. More than hall his term has passed aud though he has probably been more or less uneasy at times his right to act has never been impaired. We don’t refer to this fact complaining: ly. That is to say, we are not protesting against the right of the people of a State to select whom they like for Senator in Con- gress. The constitution of the United States declares that no man shall be denied ‘the right to hold office or exercise any ofl er function of citizenship on account of re. ligious beliels or practices. Polygamy is forbidden by law and if SMoor is a polyg- amist he has no right to a seat in the Sen- ate. But he denies that he is a polygamist and so far as we have been able to discover the charge has never been proved againet him. But whether it has been proven or not he still occupies the seat. A few years ago a Mormon was elected to the House of Representatives by the people of Utah. He protested that he was nota polygamist and it was never proved that he was. But he was voted out of the body with a rapidity that was surprising. He hardly got time to make an ordinary de- fence of his constitational right and that of his constituents. Oar complaint now, therefore, is that one Mormon is treated considerately while the other got no show. The reason was in the first case that the defendant was a Democrat and the other that be is a Republican. The morals of a good many of our statesmen are regalate ed by politics. —At a meeting of the Democratic state central committee held in Harrisburg on Wednesday CHARLES P. DONNELLY, of Philadel phia, was elected chairman for the ensuing year, J. K. P, Hany, of Ridgway, declining to accept another term. Wednes- day, June 27¢h, was selected as the date for holding the state convention and Har- risburg the place. Following his election Chairman DONNELLY re-appointed P. GRAY MEEK, of Bellefonte, as secretary. ——You don't want to forget that sop- per to be given by the Ladies Aid society of the Methodist church, in the lecture room, Thursday evening, April 26th. Tbe Methodist women are noted for their good sappers and the forthcoming one will be equal to all the others, The Reed Smoot Case, "© D FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., APRIL 20, 1906. The Rate Question at Home. The well meaning gentlemen who met in Harrisburg the other day for the purpose of inangurating a movement against a ocer- tain form of extortion practiced by the railroads deserve both encouragement and success. It would be impossible to imag- ine a meaner advantage of a helpless vic- tim than is involved in the $10 deposit re- quired with the purchase of the 1000 mile ticket. That being trne a movement look- ing toward the correction of the evil is in the nature of a public beneficence. Itisa step in the direction of justice for the weak against the strong, It is a movement in the interest of the traveling, not to say the suffering, public of Pennsylvania. But we very much doubt the efficacy of the plan adopted at the Harrisburg meet- ing the other day. It was a very creditable body that assembled and protested both orally and in writing, and the formation of | a State Board of Trade was a wise thing to | do. But the adoption of resolutions pro- | testing against the outrage is not likely | ‘40 get them much.” The railroads will | probably not pay much attention to *‘their efforts to secure a revocation’’ of the order or be worried a great deal over their well- meant endeavor to secure ‘‘a two-cent pas- senger rate in Pennsylvania.” The ap- proval of the work already done will bard- ly spread alarm among the offending cor: porations, either. There is some substance iv the last res- olution of the series adopted at the meet- ing, however. It pledges the participants in the meeting to use their best efforts ‘‘to secure thi election of members to the Gen- eral Asscuinly who will pledge themselves to support a uniform passenger rate of two cents & mle in Pennsylvania.’ 1f they had declared fur the election of members who will support such a measure is would have been more to the point. There are men in the pres nt Legislatore who would make any pledge that might be asked of them to secure votes, who, after their election would pay no attention to the , The should be against cage ore pledge or no pledge. a A—— Tax on Industrial Alcohol. There is but one reason against the pend- ing apt of Congress for the removal of the hol, and that is the Standard Oil company. The measure would have the most benef- icent effect upon the industrial life of the country. It would add vastly to the com- fort and cenveniences of the people of all conditions in the agricultural distriots. It would largely increase the productive ca- pacity of the soil and multiply the pecun- iary rewards of the farmers. Bat it would create a competitor for the Standard Oil company and therefore all the resources of that criminal conspiracy are mustered against the measure. Denaturized alcohol is a mixture of grain and wood alcohol by chemical process. It is snitable for fael, illumination and other mechanical uses. It can be produced at a price considerably less than is charged for kerosene or gasoline, while for purposes of illumination it is much superior to the former and for fuel infinitely better than the latter. Bat it threatens the Standard Oil monopoly and for that reason the re- sourceful lobby of that monstrous organi- zation bas eet up an opposition to its pas- sage. The country will watch the result with curious interest. The people are anx- ions to know which of their representatives in Congress are owned by the Standard Oil company. No other industrial country in the world taxes this element of prosperity. No other progressive government on earth would be so unjust to the people. Bat we tax it doubly. That is to say we put upon it a prohibitive tariff tax and an internal reve- nue tax equally high. The Standard Onl company’s products, kerosene and gasoline are subject to no tax burdens and wood alco hol, a useful bus offensive fluid is free from taxation. Bat the product of much greater use and advantage is taxed so heavily as to make its manufacture for commercial purposes practically impoesi- that the pending bill will be passed. ——The public at large could glean a lot of comfort from that circular letter sent to the retail dealers the past week from the large coal operators in which they stat- ed that they had an ample stock of coal on hand to carry them through a long strike, and that they wonld only sell to those dealers who would agree not to put the price up on the consumer, if the retail dealers were only snpplied by the opera- tors. But not an order for coal has been filled so far as the Bellefonte dealers are concerned, ———With the closing of the ore mines at Scotia and the abolishing of two trains on the Belletonte Central railroad Centre county is feeling the coal strike toa cer- tain extent. The American Lime and Stone company has so far been able to secure all the coal they need and expect to continue doing so. ble. There is ground for hope, however, | person NE: Where the Credit Belongs. From the Johnstown Democrat. Perbaps the highest achievement won by a senator in this generation was that scor- ed by Mr. Bailey, of Texas, Tuesday in his masterly speech on the rate bill which won over Senator Hale, of Maine, and practical- ly saved the day for Theodore Roosevelt. It was a trinmph of the very first order, a triumph of intellect and reason, a triumph of Legal learning and statesmanly compre- hension, a trinmph that borrowed nothing from agy extraneous source and that was acknowledged even by those whom it in effect laid low. The Democratic party may well feel proud of this giant from the plains of Tex- as. He hae shown himself to be not merely equal to the Knoxes and the Spoonera; he is plainly their superior in his of great constitutional questions, in his abili- ty to drive home an argument, in his on- derstanding of the genius of American in- stitutions and in his unflinching probity of thought. Had there been no Bailey on the Democratic side to meet the issues raised by the Republican conservatives, the Pres- ident must infallibly have been beaten in his effort to secure effective railway rate regulations. The credit for rate regulation will doubt- less be claimed when it is secured by Mr. Roosevelt and the Republicans, bus is real- ly belongs to Senator Bailey and to the Democrats who bave followed his lead and to those Republicaus who have been con- strained by reason and other influences to accept his view of the powers of Congress and the limitations of the inferior courts. There is now little doubt that the rate bill will pass and that it will include the Bailey anti-injunction amendment; and thas it will become what is never could have been if it had been left to the devices of the President and his friends—a real check on the capacity and favoritism of the common carriers, Coming Sare. From Leslie's Weekly. a Fuileonda are iiadvad in their t against the two-cents-a-mile passenger rate which has just gone into effect in Ohio. They bad better submit to this reduction gracefully rather than to invite farther leg- islation of a more drastic kind. The Vir- ginia Lagitiatare has enacted a similar law, ud 0 bi fie biowiotyuf ted in he New ork Legislature pr a cent Ar hall rate on the more prosperous roads. It is idle for railway ions to in Obio, that they catinot operate their ines profitably on 4 wo-sens basis. No one wil believe them, for the Jacks point the ther : of revenue. The people of the count, in no mood to stand further exactions in the interests of the railroad monopolists. With the fact known to all that a few men practically own and control all the railroads of the country and have grown enormously rich in the business, it is a poor time to talk about resisting a slight reduction in rates. It is pretty certain if rate-control legislation fails at Wash. ington there will follow an outbreak of State activity for the regulation of freight as well as passenger rates after the Wis- cousin style. Exactly So. From the Readivg Telegram. The story is now put forth that Senator Penrose, in order to avoid any appearance of hossing, will not he present at the Re- publican state convention but will go oat West on a hunting trip at the time. That would be very gracious on Pen. rose’s part, especially as his private sec. retary is state chairman and would have all the machinery as well in band with Pen- rose in Idaho or Timbootoo as if Penrose were on deck at the Lochiel or the Boas Mansion. Because the Republicans of Pennsylvania have bad the wool pulled over their eyes many times by a machine show of reform in extremity, it does not fallow that they are going to be fooled again; certainly not this year. Anyhow, it matters little whom the ma- chine shall name; the next Governor of Pennsylvania is going to be a Democrat. Would Prove an Effective Remedy. From the Springfield Republican. Why may not a corporation be im n- ed to all intents and pu as well as an individual ? Is the question thrown out in a Chicago communication to the Green Bag, a legal publication of Boston. In imprison: ing a man, the state merely takes away his liberty, his earning power and his material ambitions for the time of his sentence. If, then, an offending on were olosed ap for a certain pesiod of Sime, or its earn- ngs were appropria y the State, would in effect undergo a punishment sim- ilar to that inflicted by imprisonment of a Araon. 3 is 0 ling use on, but not many “im ments Sorporatione would be required to make law-breaking very infrequent where now it is impudent: ly common. The Motes In Our Own Eyes, From the Lincoln (Neb.) Commoner. By growing righteously indignant over Belgiam’s course in the Free State a lotof eminent imperialists in the United States to forget all about this Re- public’s course in the Philippines. ——A free-for-all fight occurred among some Italiaus at a christening up Buffalo Run, Sunday afternoon, in which clubs and knives were quite freely nsed and some foreign blood was spilled. Sheriff Kline was telephoned for and with policeman George Jodon went up to the soene, ar- rested three kes, bronght them down and lodged the trio in jail. ——The amateur gardeners will soon be dividing honors with the trout fishermen in swapping stories as to how their garden things are coming along. parties, who co Spawls from ihe Keystone, —Lock Haven people were served with ar- tificial ice for the first time Saturday by Lu- cas Bros., of Castanea. —The pupils of the Lock Haven, Mill Hall and Flemington schools last week -ontrib- uted 1,855 eggs to the Lock Haven hospital. —Some unknown miscreant recently broke into the barn of Al. DeForest, along the Ridge near Huntingdon, and poisoned four horses, their lives boing saved with difficul- ty. —A tree on the farm of Mrs. Bankin, in Fravklin county, bas a girth measurement, five feet above ground, of twenty-two feet, six inches, and is ninety feet high. It isof the red oak variety. —A suit has been entered by Hollidays- burg borough against the Postal Cable Tele- graph company to recover four years arrears of the pole license tax. This company has hitherto paid the tax under protest. ~Mrs. John Earon, who is visiting at the home of a son in Beech Creek township, Clinton county, slipped and fell on a frosty boardwalk the other morning. As a result she broke both bones of her right wrist. ~The warehouse of Barnes & Tucker, at Barnesboro, Cambria county, was entered re- cently by some unknown persons and a quantity of groceries and other goods taken. The slaughter house of the same firm was robbed of a quantity of meat. ~James Gardner, of Blacklick, one day last week sold to Corrigan, McKimmey & Co., of Cieveland, O., seventy-two acres of land and the coal lying underneath, located just west of the Indiana branch of the Penn- sylvania railroad at Blacklick, for $34,000. ~The many friends of Charles A. Greer, editor of the Altoona Times, learned with pleasure that Treasurer-elect W. H. Berry has named Mr, Greer to be his bond clerk. The position pays $2,500 a year, and the ap- pointment is for the entire term of two years. —Alderman David Kinch, of Altoona, has a watch which has been carried by some mem- ber of the Kinch family for the past 119 years. The watch was purchased by the Al. derman’s grandfather, in Lancaster. In 1853 the time-piece was turned over to him and he has used it ever since. —Sheriff G. Thomas Bell, of Blair county, died Sunday afternoon at his home in Logan township, the farm where he was born and whereon he had resided all his life. He was aged 60 years, 10 months, and 5 days. Cir- rhosis of the liver, from which he suffered for several months, was the cause of death. —Sheriff Seanor, of Westmoreland county, was good to the prisoners in the jail Sunday and they all had plenty of Easter eggs. On Saturday thirty dozen of Easter eggs were purchased by the chef at Hotel Seanor and Sunday were served to the prisoners. There are 130 registered in the jail at the present time so that each man had all the eggs could eat. A ~The Philipsburg Journal says that C. M. as | Waple, who recently purchased the valuable lot on the northwest corner of Second. and an option on the same to Clearfield and yet of hy aged 18 years, daughter of Henry Quinn, of West township, Huntingdon county, has hydrophobia, and ber condition is such that she has to be bound, She cannot recover. The origin of the disease dates back to a year ago when there were mad dogs in that neighborhood. The supposition is that she was scratched by a cat infected with the disease. ~The new bridge of the Middle division of the Pennsylvania railroad at Granville, crossing the Juniata river was put into ser- vice Saturday. The putting of this bridge into service on the division eliminates a curve on the main line of the Pennsylvania railroad which has been the source of annoy- ance in the handling of heavy freight trains, as at that point they most frequently stalled. —Driving along a road near Jersey Shore Saturday Joseph Klopp was instantly killed by a severe jolt of his wagon, dislocating the vertebrae of his neck. His team continued along the road fora distance, finally stopping beneath a culvert, where a following driver, finding the road blocked, went to see what was the matter, and discovered Klopp still on his seat, with his head hanging upon his breast, ~The commissioners of Huntingdoa coun- ty have instituted proceedings against A. L. Couch, A, L. Carothers and W. B. Wilson, former commissioners, for payment for the new bridge just completed across Spring creek, near Pague station on the East Broad Top railroad. The present board claims that the former board exceeded its authority when it accepted the bridge, and also erred in building the new bridge on the site of the former. ~The Mann Edge Tool company at Mill Hall have commenced operations in their new plant in the rolling and welding depart- ment and the several other processes will fol- low in their regular order. Skilled work- men, who had become scattered since the suspension of operations in September, 05, are returning and reporting for work at the new plant. In a week or two the shops will be filled with the old workmen and the hum of this popular industry will be a welcome sound, —The dwelling house and its contents, the property of V. B, Wertz, on Dry Ridge, some four miles west of Mann's Choice, Bedford county, together with an old store building which was used as a warehouse, the old ho- tel stables and several other smaller build- ings, were destroyed uy fire on Tuesday af- ternoon of last week. The loss was covered by insurance. The house was one of the old- . est located along what is still known as the Glade pike, having been erected simost 100 years ago. . —It is rather early in the season for snake stories, but A. P. White, of Lock Haven, had an adventure last Friday afternoon that he will not soon forget. He was on his way home from the lands of Walter Agar in the Bald Eagle mountains near Lock Haven and while coming down the mountain ran into a nest of assorted kinds of snakes. Although considerably startled Mr. White got busy at once and in a short time dispatched seven good sized snakes. At least as many more got away from him, i ENO