sy PP. GRAY MEEK. ———————————— ————————— Ink Slings. —It isn’t so nice to be the ice man in Toledo. —Mr. HEARST has announced that he is not a candidate. He hasn't denied that he is a trouble maker, however. ~The EMERY tide ie setting in so strong that already bets are being made that he will carry Pennsylvania by 150,000. —Mayor JouX WEAVER, of Philadel- phia, bas volunteered to take the stump for EMERY and the entire fasion ticket. —The Fourth of July is over but the grass bas not started to grow on the graves of its victims, who numbered hundreds. —The Republicans of the South were, of course, tickled to death when Secretary TAFT told them they were ‘time servers.” —King EDWARD is to quit horse racing, but for Heaven's sake don’t let us bear that he has also decided to stop rolling up his pants. — Wasn't it nice in young Mr. WAL. DORF A:TOR not to let us huild any false hopes about his becomivg a citizen of the United States. —Secretary SHAW bas asonounced that we don’t have enough five dollar bills. Of course he don’t. Nobody ever heard us say we did, either. —Since BoNT CASTELLANE hit the to- boggan France hae felt herself falling be- bind in sensations so the DREYFUSS case bas been hauled up for another airing. —The end of the bituminous miner's troubles will be good news to Snow Shoe and Philipsburg both of which places have suffered serions business depression for months. —Secretary WiLsox says the Chicago packing houses ‘‘are] clean from block to oan. Secretary ALGER once said the oon- tents of the cans were not embalmed, didn’s he? It they continue bunting for “‘the only man who can beat BRYAN" the other side will soon have so many presidential candi- dates in the field that they will never be able to make a choice. —The HARTJES may not haveas much money as the THAWS and the COREYS, |- bat they are making just as many people in Pittsburg sit up and take notice that all is not gold that glitters. —Epwix 8. STuarT has finally consent- ed to lead the machine's forlorn hopes in Pennsylvania. What a martyr to the cause of ‘a corrupt and criminal combina. tion masquerading as Republicans.” —Now Pittsburg and New York are threatening to wash their dirty social lin- eus Io the public gaze. Such expositions of moral rottenness are outrageous and should not be tolerated for a moment. —Secretary TAFT bas started to ‘‘break the Solid South’’ and WALTER WELLMAN has started in a balloon to find the north pole. What fool missions. We thought Simple SiMoxs lived only in nursery rhymes. —Presideut CassATT, of the Pennsyiva- nia railroad, says that all the petty officers must dispose of the stock they hold in cor- poratious operating in sections under their jurisdiction. He hasn't issued an order yet compelling bimselt to dispose of his Pennsylvania steel holdings. —The reconvened LINCOLN party conven- tion on Tuesday, nominated the entire fu- sion ticket named by the Democrats. Now if the Prohibitionists are really sincere in their desire to give Pennsylvania a clean administration there ie nothing left for them to do, but the same thing. —Mr. BRYAN'S apiary bas been assessed at $585. A pretty snug value for a few soaps of bees, but then Mr. BRYAN bas been raising the kind of bees that bave King and Queen bees skinned a mile. His are presidential bees, and be has a fine specimen right in his bonnet now. —Natarally enough President RoOSE- vELT has found it impossible to be present at the BRYAN reception and welcome home, to be held at New York. Itis just possible that if they both live the Presi- dent will be welcoming Mr. BRYAN on another occasion two years hence. —The draonken gypsy who undertook to shoot the roof out of the borough lock-up found a policeman with a billy waiting for him when he had made the hole large enough to start to escape through. Now the question will be asked : Where was the policeman while the shooting was in progress ? —The CARNEGIE and BETHLEHEM plate mills got a real jolt on Tuesday when the new government contract for armor plate was given to the Midvale plant at Phila delpbia. It was the first time such a thing has ever happened and you may rest assur- ed that it would not have been so this time bad there been a presidential cam- paign a little nearer at hand. —It what the Philadelphia Public Ledger says is trae Mr. A. E. VAN VALEENBURG, JoHN WANAMAKER's former political FRIDAY and present president of the North American Pablishing company, hasn’t enough shoulders on which to balance all the water he would like to carry. He tried to boss—and succeeded in a measure—the nominations of the regular Republicans, the Lincolnites aod the Democrats, but his work has made of itself a boomerang. He doesn’t know which crowd to support now, because he fears he might accidental- ly tie up to the one he can use the least. What's the Use! We can imagine nothing more absurd than the talk of purifying the Republican organization by ‘‘dumping’’. Chairman AN- DREWS. As a matter of fact ANDREWS is no worse than any of the others. The death of QuAY didn’t make a particle of differ- ence in the political morals of the machine. When DurHAM “‘left his country for his country’s good,” we failed to notice any surging waves of political morality sweep over the State. The death of QUAY re- moved the head but not the heart of the combination. The absence of DURHAM deprives the machiue of a strong helper but doesn’t paralyze its body. The place of a soldier killed in battle is filled before his comrades realize that he is no longer among them. WesLEY R. ANDREWS impersonated the jniquity of an odious machine. But he isn’t all or nearly all of the machine or the iniquity. He is what his party bas made him. Because of his capacity for intrigue he has been chosen for years to perform for Epwix 8. Stuart, RoBerr 8. MURPHY, Roser K. Youse, HENRY Houck and others the things which they were afraid to perform themselves or were not trusted with the authority to perform. Possibly Mr. STUART wouldn't personally stuff a ballot box. But he bas freely given AX" DREWS money to pay SALTER and others to stuf! the ballot boxes when be knew ex- actly whatthe money was used for. ‘‘BoB”’ Youxc and ‘‘Bop" MURPRY are neither better nor worse than ANDREWS, and HEN- RY Houck is a fit companion for the oth- ers. : Under the circumstances what is the use of making a ‘‘Jonah’ out of ANDREWS. Throwing him overboard, a prey to the whales and sharks of the political sea, won’t save the ship. It will humiliate ANDREWS, probably, and fool a few ol the crednlons who want to be fooled, but it won't deceive many or ‘bring mach.’ Most people will understand and appreciate the sitoation. If the reverses of last year had pot occurred ANDREWS would have been the candidate for Governor, and STUART, MurpHY, YOUNG and HoUCK would have supported him though be would have been as bad then as he ismow. Therefore what's the uss-of bypooiisy aad false es of political morality? “That hos’ eyes is sot.” ' Kot a Just Comparison. We protest against the comparison of THEODORE ROOSEVELT to WILLIAM JEN- NINGS BRYAN. The President has appro- priated some of Mr. BRYAN'S policies and is doing things which six years ago Mr. BRYAN said were essential and Mr. RoOSE- VELT with equal emphasis declared ruin- ous. But there is no similarity of charac- ter or tempernment. BRYAN is an earnest, thonghtful, conscientious, truthful wan, while ROOSEVELT is exactly the antithesis. He appears to have neither conscience, mor- al courage nor consistency of purpose. He steals another's ideas as a burglar takes property. [He falsifies whenever it serves his purpose. As Senator BAILEY declared, he is olay and very common olay at that. A muck raker of the worst type, he con- demns muck raking. After deliberately asking Congress to confiscate fortunes he declares that any one who decries wealth is a demagogue. He entered into a solemn agreement to enact a rate bill without pro- vision for a court review and then joined with the railroad lawyers in the Senate to force a provision for a court review into the measure. He ibsisted on the adoption of the BEVERIDGE amendment for meat in- spection and subsequently urged his friends in Congress to oppose that amendment. In fact he is a demagogue without pride of opinion, consistency of purpose or even moral honesty. He would sacrifice every principle of right and justice to feed his inordinate vanity. WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN is a man of different mould. We don’t all agree with him in all things, but that makes ne dil- ference in his treatment of men and meas- ures. Earnest and honest in his own views he is tolerant of the opinions of others bus pureaes his own ideas to the end. He is able, sincere and manly. His word is ea- ored and his obligations are fulfilled to the letter ‘‘though the heavens fall.”’ He ap- propriates to his own use neither the prop- erty nor the ideas of others. He is an hon- est, fair and manly man and liking ROOSE- VELT to him is ao outrage upon him and a crime against decency. There is no simi. larity, near or remote. ‘‘BAT'’ MASTERSON is more of the ROOSEVELT sort. —— When the inscription tablet on the Curtin statue was put in place it was dis- covered that a mistake had been made in the time Curtin served in Congress, which was given as ‘‘1881.1885," whereas it should have been ‘'1881.1887." [Last week an employee of the Van Amringe company came to Bellefonte, cus the figure 5 out the bronze place and countersunk a figure 7 in its place, doing the work so neatly that it bas the appearance of being | Central railroad, will be run only on Sat- cast in the original plate. | owns a large interest in the Pennsylvania STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. The Notification DHMeeting. The Republican notification meeting at the residence of EDWIN 8, STUART, nomi- nee of the party for Governor, on Saturday, was of all recent events the most grotesque. In order to give it the appearance of free- dom from machine domination most of the party leaders were kept away. Senator PENROSE was absent, and DAVE MARTIX, DAVE LAXE and Senator McNICHOL who took 80 conspicuous a part in the nominat- ing convention were purposely left out of the list of guests. In fact only two of the Philadelphia delegates to the convention were invited and they were so inconspi- cuous in the political life of the community that their presence couldn’t do any harm. But the absence of the machine managers from the meeting was no less hypocritical than the things which actually happened. For example the spokesman on the part of the convention was congressman MARTIN Bob. Young's Strange Action. The failure of RoBerT K. YOUNG, the Republican candidate for Auditor General, to attend the notification meeting on Sat- urday is not a matter of grave consequence. It doesn’t mean; as some superficial observ. ers appear to imagine, that Mr. YOUNG'S conscience has revolted against the iniqui- ties of the machine. Mr. Youxa's con- science isn’t of that inflexible sort that re- fuses to yield a trifle to accommodate con- tingencies. On the contrary it is an ex- ceedingly accommodating affair which per- mits him to take all he can get or accept whatever is offered to him. It was on ac- count of that conscience that be was somi- pated by the Republican convention at the instance of Senator PENROSE under an agreement with Mr. VANVALKENBURG. No doubt Mr. YouNe wanted to force the dismissal of Chairman ANDREWS in the most summary manner. Between Mr. AN- pREWS and Mr. VANVALKENBURG there is an irreconcilable quarrel and in putting ANDREWS at the head of the campaign com- mittee Senator PENROSE violated his agree- ment with VANVALKENBURG as interpre- ted by Mr. VANVALKENBUEG. Mr Youxa's present mission is to make VAN- VALKENBURG potential in politics and the refusal of PENROSE and STUART to humil- iste ANDREWS was no doubt a great disappointment and may have irflaenced him to run away from the notification meeting. But it won't move bim to de- cline the nomination. So far from that it may beset down as a certainty that he will accept the nomination just as soon as he is personally notified of it. The incident may develop into some im- portance later on, beyond question, but thus far it is without significance. Mr. Youxa is looking after the main chance, and may bave conceived the notion that he will stand a better chance of election alone than in company with his colleagues on the ticket. His friend VANVALKENBURG has little if any interest in the other candidates and would finely slaughter them to pro- mote the interests of Young. Bat it is not safe to draw conclusions from those facts either. VANVALKENBURG bates AN- DREWS and it is not certain that he wouldn't be willing to sacrifice the entire outfit, including Mr. Youliu, to-amdisly Lis antipathy against ANDREWS. It isa con- dition that will justify watching. was praise of the President for his magnifi- cers and successful efforts in the investiga. tion, publicity and correction of evils aris- ing from the improper and unlawful exer. cise of corporate power.”’ Mr. OLMSTED bas made a vast fortune in helping the cor porations to exercise ‘‘improper and unlaw- fal’ powers and if he thought STUART as Governor would interfere with corporate lawlessnes he would support a yellow dog for the office rather than him. pool of hypooracy that was anything but creditable to him. ‘‘He declared that he (nesn’t desire an election that has any oth- er meaning than the triumph of the princi- ples of good government.” Does he im- sgine that the people are verdant enough to be fooled by such platitudes? His nomination was for the purpose of prevent. ing ‘‘the triumph of the principles of good government,’’ and if he doesn’ know it he is too stupid to fill that or any other office. Four years ago Judge PENNYPACKER was nominated for the same reason. His repu- tation for integrity and intelligence was quite as good as STUART'S. But he bas yond the iniquities of hie predecessors and will leave it at the expiration of his term deposed and dishonored. —— An Absent Eulogy. Io his notification address to HENRY Houck the Republican candidate for Sec- retary of Internal affairs, on Saturday, Congressman OLMSTED eaid ‘‘his untiring zeal, indomitable energy, persevering in- dustry, true nobility of character and un- failing wit and humor would insure his ac. tive, faithful, impartial and successful per- formance of the duties of the exceedingly important office of Secretary of Internal Affairs.” What a travesty on truth and decency and manhood. In thus fulsomely ealogizing such a worn out party hack, Mr. OLMSTED insulted the intelligence of the State. HENRY HouCK was nominated for the office of Secretary of Internal Affairs be- cause he is the most servile instrument of the machine within the limits of the broad Commonwealth. The convention refused to nominate Major Isaac B. BRowx for re-election for the reason that be has con- ducted the office in that way. He has been faithful, efficient, courageous and intelli- gent in the performance of his duty. He aspired to a re-election because it has been the custom to give the incumbent two terms. But he was deleated for the nomi- pation because the machine could neither coerce or cajole him into doing evil and they want a man in that office who can be thus controlled. And if there were a shadow of a chance of election they have chosen wisely in the selection of HENRY Houck. He has al- ‘ways been ready for any service of the ma- chine and would not hesitate to perpetrate any trick to serve the corporations. Hap- pily there is no danger of his election, how- ever. The people have determined to elim- inate the odious machine from the polit ical life of the State. The work began last year and the reform expressed in the eleo- tion of WiLLiay H. BERRY last fall will be continued and completed this year by the overwhelming defeat of the entire Re- pablican ticket. President Cassatt's Order. President CAsSATT, of the Pennsylvania railroad, bas issued av order directing ‘‘all officers and employees’ of that company to dispose of their holdings in coal corpora tions along the line of the road. The or- der is in pursuance of a recommendation of the committee of the board of directors ap- pointed some time ago to investigate char- ges that by reason of such ownership there has been discrimination in the service of the company. Is is not admitted that such discrimination did exist, bus Mr. Cassatt wants the corporation of which he is the executive head, to be like Cwmser’s wile, “‘above suspicion.’ There can be little doubt of the wisdom of the order so far as it applies to officers of the corporation who have power or oppor” tunity to exercise discrimination. It might be equally just in so far as it concerns offi- cers or employees of the corporation who acquired their ownership in a questionable manner. Probably there would have been po injustice in requiring them to return their shares to the original donors on the same terms that they were obtained. Bat we can’t see why men who purchased property on a business basis, with money honestly earned, should not be allowed to retain it, il it doesn’t improperly influence them. Besides there are other abuses which were revealed during the recent investiga- tion. It was shown that Mr. CAssATT steel company and that as president of the railroad company he buys large quantities of supplies from the steel company at ex. orbitant prices. Nothing was said in the order concerning the ownership of such property though obviously it affords great opportunity for evil. The excess of ten dollars a ton on, say five million dollars worth of steel rails, would take a good deal of money out of the pockets of the share- holders and it is surprising that it should be forgotten. ~The State College Alumni association of Central Pennsylvania was organized at Harrisburg Wednesday night. A. Wert, 103, of Carlisle, was elected president, and Norman G. Miller, '04, assistant state economic zoologist, secretary and treasurer. Steps were taken to have the new associa. tion secure a voice in the selection of a successor to Dr. George W. Atherton, president of State College. ~The annual Baileyville picnic will be held in the park at that place on Satur- day, August 4th, at which time and place the surviving members of Company E, 45th regiment, will hold their forty-fifth annual reunion. Gen. Beaver and other promi- nent speakers will be present. All old soldiers are invited to attend. ——The Philipsburg shirt factory resum- ed operations in its new location, last Thursday morning, with a force of forty girls. It is the intention of the owners fo gradually increase the number of employees to one hundred and fifty or two hundred; unless they meet with the same difficulty now experienced in Bellefonte by both the shirt factory and the Penunsylvahia match company, an inability to secure the help desired. — -Don’t forget that beginning nes Monday the middle of the day train to State College and return, on the Bellefonte urdays. —Sabseribe for the WATCHMAN. RRA >a BELLEFONTE, PA., JULY 13, 1906. Mr. STUART also took a plunge into the agi NO 27. Sensible Hot Shot from a Veteran Re- publican. Joux A. DaLey, Esq., of Curtin town, ship, who is in a better position to know what political bossism means than any oth- er man in the county, bas been telling his fellow Republicans a few things through the columns of the Howard Hustler. In none of his articles, however, has he stated the case as tersely nor driven straighter to the point than in the ove of June 23rd, which be concludes trenchant paragraphs : that it is better to suffer tem- than to build up and forever political ol the sole aim ee 3 Yotisicat oligarehy | its cohorts at the expense of the mass of honest and We porary fopat maintain a patriotic members of the organization. Ring and boss rule must go sooner or later and this year is just as opportune as any other to forever wipe off the face of the earth any one and every one who is in any way tainted with boss rule, ber next. When the Burden Will Fall. From the Johnstown Democ Tat. The nation stands face to face with a Two Billion Dollar Congress. It has not been twenty years since it was startled by the fact of a Billion Dollar ; and 80 telling was the effect on the lar im- nation that at the ensuing election the from - fo Jowet and 3o era of comparative econ ly the pesple did pot long ey speedi Sogo the occa- they eoreed and in a few short years the party that bad giv- en us the Billion Dollar Congress was re- power. How it has used this power is revealed iture which t un remember, sion for the change stored to in a growing blio ex now moants well toward mark. these a den is eventually. Itis itsell felt even now in an enhanced cost of living that is almost without edent and is wholly without The honse- wife who finds it is more diffi. cult to make ten dollars go as far as six dollars formerly went in keeping up her home can find the explanation iu the fact that we bave progressed in a Billion to a Two Billion Whom the gods would destroy they first there is comfort in bly it has been the destruction that make mad. Perha) this thought. madness which presages has carried the Roosevelt administration to the lengths it has gone in wasting the peo- ple’s substance. ere has been no honest to be he sd pri 0 be no thong! morrow. No tion is asked as to the man who is oe, ling bills in the end. The bur- ders of lea higher er phi She . er t t fs baniehed. vag econom prostituted the office to an extent far be- | “G bust dale imeltitels with the following government of local, State lg E. OLMSTED, of Harrisburg, whose theme | fairs, : or satigel Wt The writer is not alone in this determi- nation, he knows hundreds in Centre coun- ty who fe¢l the same way, and who will act the same way at the fall election in Novem- e Two Billion seems prodigaliry from effort to eubserve the ends of economy. Riotous and reckless the whole tendency rofligacy has marked the administration. It has poured scores and hundreds of mil- lions into military and naval ize- ment whose end is likely to be troubled and the necessity lions. Very little expenditures has been for any usefnl of pouring out more mil- of the vast increase in ur- pose. The great bulk of it has gone into war ships and other forms of armament, into martial development, into ev except productive and useful channels. And the poor man burden slips back at ders of those least able to dollar of the Two Billions must be paid by the toiler. He may vot see the stream as it flows from him into the great vortex which extravagance ys the Ripe, one it. Every bat runs nevertheless and nevertheless it must drain him dry. Rooseveltism Comes High. From the Reading Telegram. Exclusive of the Panama Canal a golden it ppro- on, the increase of Uncle S8am’s ex- itures in 1904 over 1903 was $35,496, ; in 1805 over 1904, $40,336,233; in 1906 over 1905, $17,903,836, an aggregate all expenses in Pana- in three years. increase, excl ma. of §93,767, The total expenditures of the years 1903, Panama not 00h 1904, 1905 and 1906, with counted, were $2,866, 421,089. The total itares of the years 1898, 1899, 1900 1901, she four full ; of McKinl were $2,430,319,390. expenditures for the four years of Roose- velt exceeded those of the four years McKinley, although he conducted the Spanish war, by $434,104,699. Rooseveltism certainly comes high. ere Too of Why Fayette Will be for Emery. From the Uniontown Genius of Liberty. blicans will likel Fayette county give Lewis Emery a county in November. nity put upon Mr. Thompson, the deceit, majority in thi needless indig- the Jyivg and the ery, encom. passed his defeat in the Republican con- vention of June 6th, the insult to the lead- ing Republican of the county, call for the re from the Republicans of this county and no doubtit will be duly From Life. When you look down from a high sensations How the Tariff Feels. administered. Under the lace in the do you have queer, creepy hm En te de Hey? tariff is beginning to have. It will bave them worse is up much too high, either for comfor for safety. Make room and let it climb iin A eb —— TT — A Ao spawis from the Keystone. —A mile of roadway is being constructed in Chester county as an experiment. The builders claim that it will be dustiess and water proof. The cost is to be $1,200. ~—Miss Frances Myers, of Harrisburg, mourns the loss of diamonds valued at §1,- 500. It is thought a second story man who had been run out of Williamsport the day before did the job. —The Ribblett saw mill, located near Cambria Furnace, in West Taylor township, Cambria county, was destroyed by fire early Friday morning, entailing a loss of about £1,800, with no insurance. —During the month of June the clerk of the orphans’ court of Perry county issued sixteen marriage licenses. The youngest bride and groom were eighteen years of age. Since the law went into effect the number of licenses issued in Perry county totals 3,773. —A small dog went mad in one of the de. partment stores of Harrisburg on Saturday and a big excitement was the result. The dog bit no one and the trouble was brought to an end by a stranger grabbing the dog by the back of the neck, throwing him into a box and sitting on the lid. —Judgment for $40,000 has been entered in the Blair county court in favor of Charles L. Greek, an Altoona contractor, against the Pennsylvania Railroad company, which cor- poration Greek sued for illegal car discrim- ination. The company failed to file an affi. davit of defence within the required limit. —Alexander W. Irwin, of Altoona, has se. cured a patent for an air brake coupler which he claims will save thousands of dol. lars to the railroads that adopt it. Mr. Ir. win is an air brake inspector in the Altoona yards and is quite familiar with the subject of air brakes and the trouble which he be- lieves his device will obviate. —Seven large hogs belonging to Policeman Cyrus Shiedy, of Lewistown, which were be- ing fattened for an early butchering, have died within the past few days, all of which showed symptoms of cholera. James Clinger also lost several hogs with symptoms of the same disease. Precaution is being taken to prevent the spread of an epidemic of cholera. —In all probability the days of Company H, National Guard of Pennsylvania, located at Johnstown, are numbered. The company isa part of the Fifth regiment. Adjutant General Stewart has notified Captain Peter Litzell that as the citizens of Johnstown show no disposition to aid in the support of the company he has about decided to place it elsewhere. —Bishop Berry, of the Methodist Episco- pal church, has appointed the Rev. V. T. Rue, of Miflinburg, to the pastoratejiof the church at Waynesboro rendered vacant by the death of his brother, Rev. Dr. John W. Rue. Rev. C. W. Karns, of Coalport, goes to Mifflinburg, and Rev. W. A. Lepley, of Mar. ket street, Williamsport, to Coalport. Tbe Market street appointment will be filled by a supply. —The damage suit instituted against the Pennsylvania Railroad company by M. C. Waltz, of Cresson, may be taken to the Su. preme court of the State, as Attorney H. W. Storey, counsel for the Pennsylvania rail road, has appealed to the highest tribunal. asking that the finding of the Superior court, in which a Cambria ¢ounty jury affirmed a verdict of $1,446.50 in damages be set aside. Mr. Waltz's son was killed on the platform at Cresson. —Recently contractors who are engaged in the work of excavating and filling along the Pennsylvania railroad tracks between New Florence and Seward, made a ghastly find. They exhumed two human skeletons, sup- posed to be the remains of victims of the great Johnstown flood. The skeletons were in a good state of preservation. They were, of course, beyond identification. They were reinterred near where they were found and the grave was marked. —William F, Tate, conductor on one of the Goodyear lumber company’s log trains in the Hammersley cutting in Clinton coun- ty, was killed while loading logs Tuesday of last week. The car had been loaded, and as one log had rolled down against the bunkers he was in the act of hooking that one to re- move it. when two other logs came rolling down from the bank and pinioned him against the loaded car. He was extricated as soon as possible, bat his injuries proved fatal. —Wednesday while Mrs. James Buck, of Cresson, was assisting at the dinner given in the theatre by the ladies of St. Aloysius church, some one entered her house and ran- sacked the upper floor, taking $75 and an opal ring. The house, which is near the theatre, was left open for the accommodation of the ladies who were conducting the affair and some time during the afternoon between two and five the burglary was committed, The money was in a jewel box ina dresser drawer. A gold watch and several pins that were lying on the dresser were not touched. —The entire mining property of the Cres- son and Clearfield Coal and Coke company, comprising 7,200 acres of valuable coal lands in Blair and Cambria counties, was purchas- ed last Friday by J. Blair Kennerly, of Phil. adelphia. By the sale of this large coal tract the Widener-Dolan-Cochran syndicate retires from active operation. There are three mines in operation on the property and they bave a total production of 2,500 tons daily. Because of the strike prevailing among the miners of the Central Pennsylva- nia bituminous district the mines were idle until a few weeks ago, when an amicable adjustment was made with the representa- tives of the miners and the striking miners returned to work. —Not in years have rattlesnakes been so plentiful in Clinton county as this season, says the Lock Haven Express. They are ess pecially prolific in the region of Hyner’s Run, and some monsters have been slaugh- tered. A woodsman employed in the J. L. Reitz lumber camp, located on Pine creek fork of Hynmer run, four miles from the Susquehanna river, relates a story that seems almost incredible, yet he vouches for its truthfulness. He states that in his camp sixty rattlesnakes have been killed thus far this season and it is no unusual thing to slaughter a half dozen in a single day. As high asseventeen rattles have been found on a single snake, which will give a ; idea as to the size of some of the venomod reptiles. isin