diss ERY A —As a dog exterminator the Bellefonte automohile is a dandy. —It is beginning to look asifa number of people believe that HENRY Cure will be an easy one to defeat for the Senate. —The Democrats of Centre county will bold their last primary election under the present system on Saturday, June 20d. —The trouble at Washington seems to be that there are not enough ROOSEVELT brains to cope with such a brilliant trio as BAILEY, TILLMAN and RAYNER. —In eighteen years JoHX D. RoCKE- FELLER bas received $113,500,000 income from bis Standard oil holdings. And to think, be has a weak stomach, at that. —Between the President, former Senator CHANDLER and Senators BAILEY and TILLMAN there is a liar somewhere and the bog seems to be very near the White House. —1In the light of recent events in Wash- ington the wnthor of the famous “Muck Rake’ speech must bave been merely giv- ing away some of the secrets of his fellow Muck rakes. — Research has disclosed that the origi- nal chaffeurs were a class of French robbers. How fitting the name for men who now run aatomobiles at from two to four dol- lars per hour. —The Hon. Roperr M. FosTER and former Senator WM. C. HEINLE bave both announced as candidates for the Sepate in shis county. Clearfield will probably pre- sent GRORGE M. DIMELING. —The papers announce that Union coun- | LODGE and the President flatly declared it ty bas grown so good that there are no | + tals. cases for the regular sitting of the quarter gessions court to dispose of. Has BENNY FocHT reformed everybody down there ? —The limit to the court reviews was the stumbling block in the rate-bill legisla- tion, but there has been no limit to the pames the men who were pushing the measure have been calling each other since they agreed to disagree. —Out in Kansas the Democrats have fired their State chairman because he wears a silk bat and frock coat. In Pennsylva. nia, its different. Here we need the kind that can afford such eartorial luxuries. It takes money to make the political mare go. —Each man, woman and child in this country is entitled to $32.22, that is, under the per capita proportion. Have you yours? If you have, are you satisfied with it? You ought to be, for if you take any more some one else will be without their full share. —All England seems to bave been star- tled with the Earl of Weymso's statement | made in the House of Lords on the effect that *‘the country is practically without an army.’ It is the old case of English obtuseness. The Boers knew this years ago. —The woman who sued her busband for divorce because she found ont from the gtabs in his cheque book that he had paid $2 for ribbons for his typewriter would probably have fallen dead on the epot had she discovered that he was buying hoes for the woman who took care of his flower beds. —ROBERT PITCAIRN, assistant to the president of the Pennsylvania railroad com- pany didn’t want his in stock. He asked for $5,000.00 in cash, and got it. Bob was probably thinking that cash wouldn't tell as maoy tales as stock, buy then he wasn’t thinking that he would be called upon to tell a few tales himsell. —The saggestion made in Congress Wed- nesday that when our new $6,000,000 sea- terror is completed the President and his cabinet should man ic and challenge the new English “‘Dreadnaught’’ to a battle to the finish, isa good one. Perbaps if an experiment of this kind were tried once in a while the jingoes would not be eo gay about spending the public money for need- less battleships. —CARL SCHURZ is dead. Among Amer- ica's foremost men be was a leader. As publicist, statesman and patriot his life was like an open book from the moment he landed as an immigrant on our shores in 48 until the day of bis death. His wasa career of upbuilding for bumanity, made forceful by a personal character that was at all times pure and clean. In his death the country bas lost a man who command- ed the respect of the wide world. —While Mayor WEAVER, of Philadel- phia, would make an admirable candidate. for Governor there is no reason why Demo- crate should go into conniption fits becanse he has been suggested. Years before May- or WEAVER was heard of the Democrats stood for the kind of reform that he be- came conecions of only two years ago and we have scores of men who would givetbe State such an administration as h to r no other reason. Veracity in High Life. The developments of the rate bill debate in the United States Senate bave raised a question of veracity between the President and the Hon. WiLLiAM E. CHANDLER, of New Hampshire, the issue of which will be watched with carious interest. Of course everybody will hope that the result will be in favor of the President, for nobody wants to see the Chief Magistrate, the offi- cial head of the government, proved a liar. But it must not be forgotten that Mr. CHANDLER has also occupied an important place in the official life of the country. He was Secretary of the Navy for a full term and Senator in Congress for many years, so that however the matter is determined the public life of the country will be aspersed, more or less. Daring the debate on the ALLISON amendment, so-called, Senator TILLMAN alleged that Senator CHANDLER had assur- ed Sepator BAILEY and himsell thas the President ‘‘bad come to a complete disa- greement with the railroad lawyers in the Senate’’ and named Senators KNOX, SPOON- ER and FORAKER, and Senator BAILEY corroborated the statement. This was tel- ephoned to the President by Senator Since that event Senator TILLMAN has made public a written statement of Senator CHANDLER contain- ing the assertion and consequently the question of veracity is between the Presi- dent and the gentleman from New Hamp- shire and one or the other of them must bear the odium of the falsehood whether the statement is falze, or otherwise. Happily we are not responsible for the character either of the President or the ex- Senator or greatly concerned about the rep- utation of those gentlemen, personally. We would necessarily share with all other cit- jzens influenced by proper civic pride in the humiliation that must follow the fast- ening of such a vice on the President. But we can’t forget that on one or two occasions Secretary LOEB has been obliged to strain his conscience severely in order to let the President out of an ugly hole and conse- quently it is unsafe to be too positive of his veracity. But on the other hand, CHANDLER is bardly up to the standard words, the shire is nog Commissioner Martin's Conceri, Insarance Gommissioner DAVID MARTIN is much pertgrbed with apprehensions that the next ature of this State may not support Pregfident ROOSEVELT with that cordiality whieh is becoming in the parlia- ment of a gre§s Republican State.. For that reason he is véry anxious that a “deal” be consumiua tween the LINCOLN X Repub- licans and thé;remnant of the QUAY ma- chine. Senator PENROSE and Governor PENNYPACKER share in bis dread and DAVE LANE & md SAM SALTER are quite as much conce; Consequently the Gov- ernor, the Sei oF; the Insurance” Conimis- sioner and DAVE LANE held a conference in the Senator’s office the other day for the purpose of promoting harmony, but with what result has not been revealed. Measuring the probabilities of the future by the events of the past it is not easy, to see how the proposed ‘‘deal” between, the parties in question would materially. ad- | | vance the purpose which Commissioner MARTIN expresses. Admitting, for the sake of argument or by way ol illustration; that it would guarantee a Republican ma- jority in the next Legislature, it: doesn’t necessarily follow that the policies of Pres- ident ROOSEVELT would be supported or evcouraged. ‘The last Legislature was overwhelmingly Republican, for example, yet Representative CREASY'S resolution in- structing the Pennsylvania Senators in Congress and requesting our Representa. tives to support the President's railroad rate legislation was defeated, and with very few exceptions, every Republican in the body voted against it. a Commissioner MARTIN may as well be honest with the public aud candi with |; himself and admit that be doesn’t care a farthing whether the next Legislature is fa- vorable to the President or not. ‘He. wants a barmony deal for the spoils that may be gathered from a Republican viotory and Mr. MARTIN is not a atimentalist. He is for or against the impossible for Mayor WEAVER and on [President and the Republican party or the them our preference is DAVID T. Wareox, | C| of Pittsburg. —A Howard merchant is responsible tr 8c a rather shocking advertisement that ap- ty peared in the Hustler of that place last | yc week. After itemizing a number of ticles tbat are being sold at mark-do a 1 prices the following the m lest reader : Drawers, all Down ! It thing iy in the store the merchant to stop selling ‘charge an admission of 10 cents for it must beat the Eden Magee if the pants; overalls and drawers are all down. f uo ¢ + td » Overalls ad | Th are really as advertised we ‘would advise : 1 stian religion, for that matter, necord- in gly as one attitude or the other _ would — —— md ne, Youthute lo soma] parse; 8 ha beaver until it antiod the White House, ) wall ballot Safe ys es when it was promptly and properly contra- Lh wa EE whiche dicted. The outcome will be awaited with Ti Xr par- ony inte or in whatever interest promises him'the odio uy in .- t advantage. Sy. | ——A ood in is very much needed at ere is no . " Tau this time, but though we bad every prom- : y i ise of it this week the fall was quite limited peel ¥ 1 $ i Tar 0 the Prsbytarihg oh Dee, P. S.—Alter the above was pat in type old to hold in the court Vos on 20th is causidg some of the o Ad ens” to brush up their orthogra: or : 1 SAR A The Logical Candidate, The esteemed Philadelphia Record ven- tures the opinion that ‘‘Colonel WATRES, of Lackawanna, who wants the job, is the logical candidate of the Republican organ- ization of Pennsylvania for Governor.” There is both reason and justice in the prop- osition. Colonel WATRES has been a most subservient and an exceedingly useful ser- vitor of the machine for some years and he ought to be rewarded. That nomination is the recompense for which he yearns and it could be given to bim this year without the least prejudice to the interests of the people. That is to eay, he is absolutely certain to be defeated for election and con- sequently will bave no opportunity to car- ry his huckstering proclivities into the public life of the Commonwealth. We are constrained, moreover, to coin- cide with the notions of our esteemed Phil- adelphia contemporary upon the platform which should be placed under the candi- date in the event that Colonel WATRES is nominated. ‘‘He should be nominated,’ the esteemed Record asserts, ‘upon a plat- form declaring in favor of the proposed QUAY monument.’”’ Nothing could be more appropriate. The QUAY monument is not a conception of the WATRES brain, probably, for the WATRES brain is not pro- lific of ideas, good or bad. But it was made possible by the participation of Wa- TRES in the political commerce, or myste- rious influence, which ‘‘changed a majori- ty of the convention into a minority over night,” and nominated the preposterous PENXNYPACKER instead of the then bucea- neerish ELKIN for Governor four years ago. Besides QUAY promised the nomipation to WATRES this year and though QUAY is dead the machive of which he was the architect, build:r and manager still lives, a somewhat precarious life, no doubt, but a life nevertheless. As the death of the head of a corporation doesn’t abrogate its contracts or absolve it of obligations in- curred during his lile, the QuAY machine is morally and legally bound to nominate WATRES, il be wants to be nominated un- der existing circumstances, and the public which is concerned in the maintenance of commercial integrity, even to the extent of honor among thieves, is under obligations to the esteemed Record for reminding the hicle for the expression of public sentiment on the QUAY ‘monument is likewise peed- ed. Absurd Rory C Contraiict It was hardly atomary for he White House authorities to deny the absuid state- ment telegraphed from Washington to some of the machine ne Dew ipesk of She State to the effect at'P VELT has in mind the conversion’ okithe dedicationof the new State capitol into a political meeting. The dedication ceremo- nies bave been fixed for October 6th, and the President has engaged to speak on the occasion. Bat it will be a purely civie event'and a political épeech ould be no more permissible there than ‘at la charity bazaar or Sanday school convention. He the York fair enroute to Harrisburg, but a political speech there would be equally in- appropriate. President ROOSEVELT has done some cu- rions things since his entrance into ocon- spicnous. lite. Three’ years ago he took the stump like a an ordinary ro-stormer to in- fluence the vote 1n several western States and made speeches that were so startling that be bad to be forced to go home. On one occasion, at least, during his sojourn at Oyster Bay, since his elevation to the Presidency, he talked politics at a picnic of school children, to the amazement of the managers and the public. But it can bard- ly be imagined that he would so violate not only the proprieties but}'every rule of common decency by speaking in heball of the ‘‘criminal combination masquerading as Republicans’ in this State, on thejocoa- sion of the dedication of the State capitol. Probably this absurd aspersion on the character of the President was. by the managers of the machine as ‘‘a good enough MoRrGAN until after the election.” That is to say, it is known that last week the machine managers were employing every available expedient to influence the LINCOLN, ‘Republicans to unite}with them on a sort ot - semi-respectable} and§jpartly Sorrdptticket, and it was believed that such a lie would belp the frand along. Thus influenced by hope the absurd story 8} Jupiter Plavius fooled us by pouring down a good shower on Wednesday evening. ‘QUAY machine of its obvions duty. A ve: |’ may consent to tarry for a brief period at | STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., MAY 18, 1906. No Ovonsion for Alarm. Bhose ctcimed contemporaries, mostly Relpfotioan, which are more or less afraid Chairman DoXNELLY, of the Demo- — State committee, will neglect some opportunity to upper-cut, or under-jab, or side-swipe the remnant of the QUAY ma- chine this year, may compose their per- turbed spirits. Chairman DONNELLY bas all the ability, sagacity and vigilance with which they invest him in their insincere eulogies. He has had the experience and has the energy and pertinacity of which | situation. they speak so freely. They will discover, moreover, as those that know him believe, that he has the will and purpose to make the best of his opportunities for the Dem- ocracy and that his management of the campaign will be fully as snocessfal as was that of Chairman HALL, whose excellent management won for the people of the State the glorious victory of last fall, and who left the party in a better organized | 1% condition, more hopeful and barmonious than it has been for many, many years. But the chairman of the state committee can’t do it all bimself. The Demceratic and so-called Independent papers which are so generous in proffering advice to Chairman DONNELLY, have an important part to perform in the work of the political regeneration of Pennsylvania which is now being inaugurated under his leadership. Fooling the public into the support of po- litical ‘‘decoy-ducks’ for the purpose of electing Republicans to Congress, and in- cidentally restoring the machine to power, is no pars of the program, however. The effective plan is to ‘‘hew to the line, let the chips fall where they may.”” In other words assail the machine from top to bot- tom, regardlese of the result to candidates. Chairman DONNELLY will do his part and we believe will do 1t well. He is not where he is to further selfish interests, punish enemies or reward friends. Bat he has important interests to take care of, sa- cred obligations to faldll and splendid pur- poses to achieve. With the honest and earnest help of the press and the people, he will succeed and when the Ides of Novem- ber mark the close of the campaign will be enabled to proclaim a substantial and endaur- ig victory for the people, IF OTHERS ARE : : AND VIGILANT AS HE. We ve no objections to the advice or to the rentoms tml. Is Jo ofl if shee are also wokks to faith. Acco modating General Carson. Attorney General CARSON has decided that the constitation of Pennsylvania is ‘unconstitutional on the apportionment questicn. That is to say, in his reply to the application for a mandamus to compel the Secretary of the Commonwealth to file the certificate of nomination of John KE- HOE, of Mahonoy City, as a candidate for State Sevator. in the thirtieth senatorial district, Mr. Ci X declares that the new apportionment is’ constitutional notwith- standing the fact that it violates the ex. press provision of the constitution relating to apportionment of the State into sena- ‘torial districts. The new apportionment bill divides Lan- caster county, making a district of one part and attaching the other part to the county of Lebanon to form another district. Now, as a matter of fact, the constitution forbids such a division of a county. ‘No county shall be divided unless entitled to two or more tors,” is the exact language of the oe — law, and Lancaster coun- ty is not entitled to ‘‘two or more Sena- tors.”” In fact it has less population than Berks county, which has only one Senator, and falls 34,590 short of the population of Lackawanna county, which gets only one Senator. But Attorney General CARsoX is equal to any emergency and can be depended up- on to decide anything that the Governor or the Quay machine requires. A couple of years ago he decided that the law in. creasing the compensationlol Judges in commission was constitutional and though the decision was subsequently] affirmed by a recreant and fortunately retiring Justice ‘of the Supreme court, no self-respecting Judge has drawn the added salary. But CARSON ¢ 't mind. His master wanted the d ‘and got it just as he would have au official declaration that the moon is made of green cheese, if he had asked for it. ——Qounoil, the Street committee or whoever has the matter in charge will have to move a little faster than they have the past two weeks if they expect to have the High street bridge replanked in time for the big crowds on the day of the dedication of the soldier's monument. It is now over three weeks since it was decided to fix up the bridge and all the progress that has been made eo far is a big pile of plank in ‘the middle of the street. Now il only the Coleville band had begun their summer evening concerts they might utilize the plank pile for a bandstand. ——College and High school commence- ——Subseribe for the WATCHMAN, ments will soon be the order of the day. States iceman, th will puandiniby a polioen quiet. SVN ‘work of NO 20. A Bad Man to Feol With, From the Pittsburg Dispatch ( Rep.) When Senator Aldrich unloaded the Hep- Pues of dianedit Ta ie ng the Pres. ident by placing is in e of a radical Democrat the joke was keenly relished in corporate circles. Subsequent develop- ments have proved that the Senator from South Carolina is a bad man to fool with. He is more than able to hold bis own in any contest of wits and his shrewdness in baving former Senator Chandler reduce to writing the negotiations between the White House and himself produces an awkward Since the President recailed Tillman's invitation to the dinner to Prince Henry the Senator bas steadfastly kept hia vow pot to cross the threshold of the White House during the present administration. This compelled the President, il he wished to consult with the Senator in charge of the Administration measure, to use an in- termediary, Mr. Chandler. Bus Mr. Till- Joan | finds it a good rule in politics, asin Yuta, lo to take nothing for granted. He es or Chana veo the the men ng Mr er’s report © President’s advice sent to Tillman. Mr. Chandler permits * this publication, thus corroborating the statements and as they agree with the news of the ons published at the time the exhibit is im- pressive, Where Mr. Aldrich is likely to find his joke turned upon himself is in the ure of Senatorial manipulation uncovered in the muddle. Flourishing the Big Stick. From the Johnstown Democrat. Once more the Big Stick is in evidence. The Secretaries of War and State have both taken it npon themselves to announce to Panama that they will tolerate no revola- tions nor election disturbances which “might hinder the work on the canal.’ It might ‘“‘be took jocose, as we say in Lare- do,”” were Panama to reply that she thought she would bave time to engineer several revolutions and elections before the United States started building the canal. Bus of course the work of canal digging is ‘‘oonstructively’’ proceeding, even though the actual construction is not being done. This is something after the fashion in which Congress can vote itself real mileage on the strength of a constructive recess. Anyhow, Gov. Magoon bas been notified that the United [Staten 8 8 ready so step in at any stage e pr ngs al Panama into line if she does not oi and hold her coming election y The situation is interesting. It will at least show whether a peaceable election can be held in South America. Zien, Sout peo: (it cannot. “ne ence against it x nh the lack of a precedent. Possibly with the United The Why of It From the Williamsport Sun. The organs of the corrupt and criminal combination predict that State Treasurer Berry will find nothing out of the way in the treasury and that when he lifts the lid be will discover everything in ghipshape order. Of course the wish is father to the thought with these machine organs. If, as they declare, Treasurer Berry will find the condition of the treasury satisfactory Mr. Barty aud the people who elected him will be well pl , tor no honest man wishes to have a return to the conditions which existed in the treasury under the regime of the corrupt and criminal combination. And again, if State Treasurer Berry shall be unable to make any unpleasant discov- eries it will not be because things connect- ed with the State treasury have been con- ducted in an honest and legal manner in the past quarter of a century, but because since the election of Mr. Berry the gralters have worked night and day to remove all traces of their orooked work. This sting the treasury in shape for the new incumbent began shortly alter the election and should have been thorough enough to destroy all evidences of machine management. No Enlargement of That Army. From the Johnstown Democrat. The Coal Trust frankly proclaims its ad- miration of the Pennypacker Cossac In a formal address to the ¢ public it pays high tribute to this roving band. of armed men paid for by the State to i the pri- vate interests of railway and afte monopo- Tithe a Yoyo fon th he ple at upon t el array of ex-benevolent assimilators with the same unreserved approval that the trust itself so freely avows. Bat it will take something more than a Coal Trust endorsement to convince the general public that the Pennypacker Cos- sack’s are the State’s chief glory. There is not the same enthusiasm among the plain Fala over the Russianization of Pennsyl. that we find th bg we am She moBOpe combines which i business. And the Republican allies and servants of the ons will their hands full in the next Legisiatore carry ous their ambitious plan to have the Soak forces made even more formidable u now. A Little Late In Lock the Door, From the Springfield Republican. Mr. Roosevelt's 8 on that no m oil or coal lande on the public Sowa, there are any left, should pe came late in the history of hg a States. We are all alienated, so to # “Is ie time to close the barn door, Jona ‘Yes, father, but the horse is stolen.” Up in Canada, the country is still yo enough to save a few of the valuable ural di ts from private monopolistic ownership. It was pointed out in these columns several weeks dao that the On rio government had decided to keep manently the rich mineral lands near balt under government ownership and trol. The Canadians are singly profit by other folks’ experience p pilot where sa ern nat: | so, however, the baby Spawls from the Keystone. ~Clearfield has twelve cases of scarlet fever. : —At Easton Mrs. Theodore Miller, aged 55 yedrs, while burning waste paper in ber back yard, was burned to death. —Some eastern Pennsylvania corn fields have been so kadly damaged by beavy rains that they will have to be replanted. ~Mrs. John Rinker, of Lower Saucon, 98 years old, spent a day in tbe garden, plant- ing onions and sowing lettuce seed. ~The will of George Kessler, of Philadel- phia, leaves about $11,000 to various Meth o- dist Episcopal boards or institutions. —Mr. and Mrs. George M.Hill, of Muncy, have just discarded the cook stove they started housekeeping with fifty years ago. —The Pennsylvania Railroad company has purchased a part of the land in the vicinity of Mt. Union belonging to Dr. VW. T. Scheaffer for $48,000. —President Mitchell, of the United Mine Workers, was last week offered the presi- dency of a grange bank, at Benton, Pa., at a salary of $10,000 a year. He declined the offer with thanks. —()., G. Fleck’s farm in Sinking valley was invaded Monday night by dogs belong- ing to the foreign colony. at Elk Run, and his entire flock of twenty-five sheep was killed by the canines. —Bond of $5,000 was accepted at Somerset on Monday for each of the seven men charged with murder in connection with the riot at Windber on April 16th, when three men and a boy were killed. —Mrs. Minnie Rowe, accused of poisoning her husband, William Rowe, who died under suspicious circumstances last October, was liberated at Lewistown, Mifflin county, Tues. day evening by the grand jury who ignored the bill on accountn of iusflicient evidence. —A gas vein was struck at Waterford, Juniata county, last week, the gas being strong enough to blow the materials from the well and its escape can be heard for some distance away. The well is now over 2,000 feet deep and will be carried still deeper. — Rev. Charles James Wood, aged 52, rec- tor of St John’s Protestant Episcopal church at York, and regarded as one of the most prominent ministers in the Episcopal priest. hood, died suddenly last week. He is survived only by his aged mother, Mrs. Charles L. (Davis) Wood. —Abram Whistler, a farmer living near Newburg, Cumberland county, was hauling a hive of bees to his home Monday when a sudden jolt of the wagon knocked the top off the hive. The hundreds of bees thus re- leased attacked Whistler and stung him so severely that be died shortly afterward. ~—A big lumber yard at Tuscarora, a few miles esst of Mifliin, cavght fire Sunday morning and before being extinguished the flames did considerable damage. It is located near the Pennsylvania railroad and caused a delay in the running of the passenger trains both east and west. Ties along the railroad caught fire. ~Thomss Berry, aged 20 years, was fatally stabbed by his chum, Clark Davberman, aged 17 years. Thursday near Mill Hall, Clinton county. Berry's own penknife was the weapon used. He lived an bourand: a half aftex the shooting and before his death made the statement that his death wound « was due to an accident, as they were only in fun. —After being buried in a garden for nearly 20 years, a gold wedding ring was turned up by a plow in West Pikeland township, a few days ago, and bas been returned to its owner, Mrs. C. V. Llewellyn of Phoenix. ville, Pa. The ring was of the plain band variety, and on its inner circumference had engraved the name of Mrs. Llewellyn, who had moved away from the West Pikeland farm nearly 15 years ago. —The Laurel Oil and Gas company of Indiana, Pa., has just brought in its first oil well and made a strike on its large ‘holdings near Sepulpa, Indian Territory. This first’ well produces 400 barrels a day. The com pany has 1960 acres leased in a most promis: ing oil field. The members of the Laurel Oil and Gas company are Judge John P. Elkin, Harry and Joseph Clark, Harry and Richard Wilson, of Indiana; John C. Ewing; of Tyrone; Hon. James Kerr, of Clearfield; Warren Thomas, of Johnstown. fin —The part of the Clearfield Novelty Works destroyed by fire last week will be rebuilt as soon as possible. The building’ will be one story high with a floor space | containing as many square feet as did the one destroyed by fire which was three stories high. It will be fire proof throughout, solid brick walls, cement floors and steel roof, and, will be fitted throughout with mode machinery. The new building and equip- ments will cost £50,000. The insurance on the old building and machinery amounted . to £12,500. —Miss Bertha Fagiey, who sued W. H. Goodfellow for breaking bis promise ‘to! marry her, was on Saturday awarded thi sum of $4,100 by the arhitrators at Alt on The sum which her counsel, H. : Graffius, claimed that she was entitled under the agreement of Go Yi her $25 a month for the bala was $11,100. H wa i" Hop ancy of life was 37 years and u h a month agreement that is the sum | be would have reached had she consented to accept the offer. The plaintiff will take an appeal from the degision of of the arbitrators. —As a Beech Creel eda cur 5! near Lock Haven on , Engineer E.* | 3. Morrison ng Fireman Hoover almost simultaneously discovered a little Sn parently about th years old standin | directly on the or The engineer very promptly reversed his. a ne and Fi n Hoover lost no ling fheoWsE the cab wi to the engine : in preparation for picking the babe up. Bel he could do. stehpon, opiside bp. rail and the fireman called to her to lie down, realizing t that this was her, only salva: " | tion. She promptly ng flat on’ | her face. The engine pi — aay by only a couple ‘of inches and the. entite train passed over her,the 1ittié%irl emerging ; afterward un harmed. : Le
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers