ELS Lr ———— = BY P. GRAY MEEK. ink Slings. —Kingstoa, Jamaica, had an earthquake that wasn't caused by a powder mill ex- plosion. —The President bas come down the tree in the Brownsville episode, bat he basn’t explained why he went up. —CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS drew a sal- ary of $320 per annum aod that is all ke got for discovering us but fame. —What the country Members received in the way of appointments at Harrisburg wasn’t enough to take care of many of their constituents. —0ld man Winter seems to have found his way back to his busivess office. Dur- ing the fore part of the week it looked very much as though he had vamoosed. —Au English wind mill at Reigate has been turned inte a church. If environ- ment has anything to do with it here will be a congregation that will get long enoogh sermons. ~—1It is just three days since the depart- are of SAMUEL W. PENNYPACKER from Harrisburg and it will scarcely be three days more until Pennsylvania wili bave forgotten that he ever was. —Wouder how the Hon. Bon MURPHY, ofl Johnstown, feels surrounded by that pressed leather frieze iu the reception room of bis suite in the capitol. It is certainly a fine nest for such a fine looking bird. —Many a lazy fellow who could be lay- ing up something against a rainy day finds it much more to his liking to spend his time argaing out how long this wave of prosperity is going to sweep over the coun- try. ~The small turnout of people from a distance to the inaogural ceremonies of Governor STUART was probably not so much due to a lack of desire to attend on the part of she faithful as it was to a lack of free transportation. —In Utah the Legislatare is going to passa law permitting candidates for cer- tificates as dentists to practice on the conviots in the state prisons. It is not clear whether the plan is to secare better dentists or fewer convicts. —The banking power of the banks of the United States is only six billion dollars less thau she combined power of all the banks of all foreign countries, yet every time one of the directors of the Bank of Englavd blows his nose Wall street begins to doctor for a case of grip. —The spring elections are only a little over a month off and it is important that good men aspire to the offices to be filled. Don’t give your support to anyone, but re- member that the meu you are to elect will fill offices which effect you more directly than any others within your gifs. —The Pennsylvania State editorial aseo- ciation on Monday resoluted to demand the repeal of the press-muzzler law, but unfortunately for the efficacy of the reso- lation many of the editors who joined in its passage had previously supported Legis- lators who will nos vote lor the repeal. —The Pennsylvania Railroad probably thinks of issuing that two million lot of bounds and stock in order to let the news. paper people of the State in. We haven't had much interest in the old concern since Jan 1ss, 1906, and perhaps this is to bea nice chance to invest some of the money we have so kindly loaned to delinquents. —The Hon. ANDY CARNEGIE repoited more personal property for taxation than any of the others of New York’s multi mil- lionaires. This does not mean that ANDY reported absolutely all of his. It is men- tioned merely to show that while no one knows how much honesty is involved AN- DY is that much more honest than the rest. —The people interested in the welfare of the Bellefonte hospital are not alarmed be- cause the Board of Public Charities bas recommended that its hi-ennial appropria- sion of five thousand dollars for mainte- oance he reduced to four. It will be put up +40 the Legislature good and strong and if returns are not forthcoming then we will ‘be disappointed. —The nerve of Senator D. 8. WALTON «in wantiog to be president pro tem of the Senate session of 1909, is not a very re- markable exhibition. He was president of the basted Farmers and Drovers National ‘bank of Wayneshurg and any man who «gould do what he did to shat institution would have nerve enongh to waus to take -8t. Peter's place at the gate. —Under the sheep law now in effect in this State an owner receives six dollars for each sheep killed by a dog, while the costs for deciding that the sheep is dead run from six to eight dollars. Wouldn't it be better to have the wool pulled over the eyes of justice occasionally and pay for a few sheep that have not been killed than to spend so much on the red tape of proving is. —Governor-elect STUART'S inacgural sounded allright but the first action of the - Legislature looked bad. Every one of the . reform Republicans voted with the machine - Members to force Treasurer BERRY to pay that fifsy thousand dollar warrant to archi. tect HustoN. Mr. BERRY had refused . payment with the hope of precipitating a suit that would carry the scandal into court where a proper investigation could be made, bat it is evident that even the re- + formers don't want that kind of an investi- _VOL. 52 Senator Tillman's Speech. _— We own to feelings of satisfaction over the speech of Senator TILLMAN, of South Carolina, on Satorday. TILLMAN is not always wise and sometimes he is too radical in his opinions to be effective. But he is honest, invariably, and candid, and on the occasion in question those merits of his dis- course were supplemented by accuracy. He declared that the President's order dis- missing the negro troops for participation in a murderous riot at Brownsville, Texas, was a usurpation of aathority and a crime as atrocious as lynching. The troops were guilty of a grave crime, he said, and de- served punishment. Bat the law provides a punishment as well as a method, and in imposing sentence outside of the law and by other than the lawful wethod, the Presi- dent committed a grave offence. The negro troops were guilty of the high. est crime against the community in which their murderous assault occurred. The proper course to pursue under the circum- stances was to give the civil authorities ample opportunity to apprehend and punish the wretches. Under precisely similar circumstances that course was pursued in Ohio when white soldiers were involved. But the President wouldn't consent to it in the case of the black soldiers while he proceeded to punish guilty and innocent alike in violation of the constitution, the law and every principle of justice. No tri- bunal has a right to panish innocent men hecanse others have committed a crime. No mau has a right to punish even guilty men nnless they bave been convicted by due process of law. President ROOSEVELT has done both of these things. Bat be has done moreand worse. Ever since his elevation to the Presidency he has been encouraging the negroes toa frame of mind which Senator TILLMAN declares leads inevitably to racial conflict. He has incited the negro troops in the army to envy and vengeance. Having accomplish ed this result he disposed the troops so as to give them the fullest opportunity for vengeance. For example, he knew that the men v;bo perpetrated the outrage at Browns- ville were ruffianly. They had heen guilty of similar offences at northern posts and yet were sent to that southern station where race prejudices w he certain to incite them to violence. As a matter of fact the affair looks like a conspiracy to reach precisely the climax expressed in the shooting up of the town and the subsequent usurpation of authority by the President. Promises Without the Right Ring. Governor STUART continues to make re- form promises ‘‘to the ear,’’ though there is danger that he will break them to the hope. In his inaugural address on Tues- day he professes great anxiety to pursue the investigation of graft in the construc- tion of the capitol. He declares that he is in favor of full exposure and fit pumsh- ment at any cost to the treasury. He even recommends aun appropriation and the em- ployment of special counsel. That sounds fine to the casual listener. But it lacks the ring of the true metal. It jingles, in other words, like a coin with a hole in it. The only way to get a searching and sufficient investigation of the capitol graft is in the courts. A legislative inquiry will not do and an investigation by a commis- gion will prove equally disappointing. The transparent subterfuge of Attorney General CARSON is the best evidence in the world of this, He has gone to the pains of ask- ing a great many questions, the answers to which have been evasive or contemptuous. Bat they have apparently satisfied CaRr- SON, who is now putting questions and an- swers in the form of a report to the Gov- ernor. The Governor will probably refer it to the Legislature and the whole matter will be treated as a vindication. If the new Governor and those associated with him in the administration of the State government are in earnest they bave a splendid opportunity now to inaugurate a real investigation. Demand was made at the State Treasury the other day for pay- ment of what the State Treasurer regards a fraudulent claim. Payment was refused and it is expected that mandamus proceed- ings will be begun soon. But there is time enough yet to organize a successful fight for the defense of the treasury. If the) Legis- lature will appropriate $20,000 to employ couneel and procure evidence twenty times that much will be saved aud if the new Governor will say the word the money wiil be appropriated. Both on Good Committees, The Senator from this distiict—Hon. GEO. M. DIMELING, and the Member from this county—Hon. JOHN NoLL, have no reason to complain of failure to be proper. ly and oreditably recognized in the forma- tion of the committees. Both have been placed on some of the moss importans com- mittees, and each one will have an oppor- tunity, as they will bave the disposition, to care for the interests of their constituents in the best manner possible. In the Senate Mr. DIMELING has been placed on the com- mittees of Agricultare, Forestry, Game BELLEFONTE, STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. | and Fish, Pablic Buildings and Grounds, Law ard order, Finance and Inland Navi- gation, and Mr. Noll in the House, is a Member of the Appropriaticn, Elections, Geological Survey, Library and Federal Relations. We congratulate these gentlemen on the auspicious start they are making, and feel assured that the interests of the people of Clearfield and Centre will be watched and carefully guarded while in their charge. A Disappointing Appointment. The first official act of Governor STUART, if an act performed before his inanguration can be so designated, is not indicative of reform along a line npon which improve, | ment was specifically promised. The ap-’ pointment of M. HayMprox Topp, of Phil- | adelphia, to the office of Attorney General» on the other hand, implies an adhesion to the old policy of corporate dominance in the State. Mr. Topp is all that could be desired in ability and character. In com- plimentary phrase it is said of him thai he is “‘a lawyer's lawyer.” In other words, he is so well grounded in the principles of | law that other lawyers come to him in mo- | ments of doubt and perplexity. No high- er tribute could be paid to his legal at- ' tainments, | Bat Mr. TopD is essentially a corpora- tion lawyer. He is what might be justly characterized as an equity expert. Daring the long period of his professional experi- ence he has devoted his considerable men- tal energies to the mastery of, not so much the science of law, as the infirmities of the statates. It is no disparagement either to his mental or moral equiptaent that this is trne. Mr. Topp had no aspirations for public life. His ambitions were all in the direction of professional encocess and cor- poration practice is the certain and short line to achievement in that direction. Cor- porations seek lawyers who are able and adroit in equity courts and equity practice trains the mind to favor corporate inter- ests. In the appointment of Mi. ToDD to the office of Attorney General, therefore, it may be said that Governor STUART has disappointed the expectations of those who imagived that the interests of the peaple rather than those of the corporations will be conserved by the new administration. Possibly the new Attorney General will hold the balance evenly between the two interests and while conserving she rights of corporations will not subvert those of the people. But it is certain that thoughtful and observant citizens would have felt safer for the future if a man less obligated to cor- porations and more familiar with the gen- eral principles and practices of the law were Attorney General. Constant use of corpor- ation lenzes ultimately give a corporate tinge to things. Why are Our Senators Silent. Why is Senator PENROSE silent when the President is accusel of usurpation and what does Senator KNOX mean by urging LonGE, of Massachusetts, to withdraw his resolution declaring that the President was within his constitutional limitations in dis. missing the colored troops? Are we to understand that the Pennsylvania Senators are among the opponents of the President in the controversy now in progress? Itcan hardly be. The charge is of the gravest character. If it is sustained it may result in impeachment proceedings and the dis- grace of RoosEVELT. PENROSE will hard- ly contribute, even negatively, to sucha peril. KXNoX couldn't possibly be a party to snch a thing. Ooly a few weeks ago PENROSE was shrieking bysterically to the voters of Pennsylvania to support the President and KNOX made two or three speeches during the campaign to the same purposes. The only menace under which ROOSEVELT rest- ed at the time was that a real friend of his, personal as well as political, appeared like- ly to be elected Governor of the State. ROOSEVELT wouldn't have suffered in con- sequence of the incident though the Repub lican machine would probably have been fatally damaged. But PENROSE and KNox sounded the alarm that the President was being threatened with all sorts of enmities and opposition and urged voters to come to his rescue. Now that he is in real danger, however, they are silent. . We helieve that the conduct of the Presi. dent in relation to the negro troops is in- defensible, It was a usurpation that in- volves the gravest danger and may work disastrous consequences. Bat PENROSE ought to make some effort to shield bim and KNOX is equally bound to come to his defence. They pretended to be his friend last fall even after the incident which has brought him under ori ticism and stirred up the prejudices of others under the false pre- tense that he was in danger. But now that he is in danger, now that determined and able men like Senator FORAKER open- ly accuse him of high crimes and mis- demeanors, for the usurpation amounts to that, they are silent. ~—This has been another week of rain, mud, snow and general disagreeableness. PA., JANUARY 18, 1907. Stuart Rebukes Pennypacker. The striking feature of Governor StU- ART’S inaugural address is the palpable se- bake of the practice of bis predecessor in office, the absurd PENNYPACKER. ‘‘Pre- eminently,’’ declares the new Governor, “I desire to call attention to the condition of the hospitals for the care of the indigent insane. To my mind the care of these un- fortunates is the first doty of the State whose wards they are. This obligation is a sacred one and not only rests upon the grounds of common humanity, but arises because it is utterly impossible for the in- digent insane to receive, elsewhere, the treatment which they ought to have and which the State should furnish to them. We have uot kept pace,” he continaes, “in the last ten years with the rapid in- crease ir the number of cases of this ohar- acter and as a consequence the state insti- tations for the insane are much overcrowd- ed.” Two years ago precisely the same condi- tions existed and the machine Legislatare reluctantly obeyed the public demand for | improvement by appropriating money, in | part, if not sufficient, to remedy the evil. | But Governor PENNYPACKER vetoed every such appropriation for the ostensible rea- gon that the funds in the treasary were in- sufficient whereas, as a matter of fact, there was abundance of money in the treasury to meet every requirement of that kind. What Governor PENNYPACKER really meant, however, was that the measure of the cupidity of his graftiog friends had not been: accurately taken and the indi- gent insane and other helpless wards of the State should wait aod suffer until the last desire of the gralters was satisfied. It was to rebuke this iniguity that Governor STU- ART spoke as he did with reference to the delinquencies in charity work for the past ten years. The money that ought to have gone to improve the conditions of the insane was stolen out of the treasury to feed the rapao- ity of the gralters concerned in the con- struction of the new capitol. The condi- tions of the treasury would not permit of sanitary plambing or additional space in the Danville Insane asylum, where help- less patients were huddled together like pigs in a sty. Dat there were plenty of funds to buy mabogany chairs by she foot and bronze chandeliers by the pound at an aggregate cost unparallelled in the history of architecture. That was PENNYPACK- ER'S method of compensating his friends for flattery. As QUAY discharged bis obli- gations by placing public patronage where it would do the most good PENNYPACKER paid his political debts by opening the treasury to those who served him. Cortelyon’'s Nomination. The nomination of GEORGE B. CORTEL- YOU to be Secretary of the Treasury con- tinues to create trouble. The latest aspect of the affair is a difference between the Na- tional Cisy bank of New York, which is opposed to the confirmation, and J. PIER- PONT MORGAN & Co., who favors him. The National City bank is the Standard oil financial institution and is said to have been receiving all the treasury favors for ten years or more. MORGAN & Co., have not been favored with advance information or even deposits under the administration of Lyman J. GAGE and LESLIE M. SHAW. They think it is about time that they should have an inning. There are a good many people opposed to CoORTELYOU for that office for other reasons than those which influence the Standard oil crowd. As chairman of the Republi- can National committee during the recent presidential contest Mr. CORTELYOU put himself under obligations to certain finan- ciers for sinister services and it is widely be- lieved that his nomination for the office was for the purpose of giving him an opportunity to reimburse them. But that is an old fashioned notion which won’t cut much ice. If CoRTELYOU'S nomination is re- jected it will be for other reasons than thas. There is another nigger in the woodpile. We are of the opinion that CORTELYOU will be confirmed in the near fatare but predict that it will be after an understand. ing has been reached with the managers of the National City bank. The nomination has heen referred to the Finance committee of the Senate of which Senator ALDRICH is chairman. ALDRICH is related to the Standard cil company by marriage. That is to say, his daughter is the wife of Mr. ROCKEFELLER’ son and incidentally the Senator is the agent of the Standard in the Senate. The party can’t afford to lose CORTELYOU so that it is safe to guess that the problem will be solved by an agree- ment between the candidate and the con- firming power. ——Twins were born to an Austrian woman, living near the Bellefonte furnace, last Saturday afternoon. One of the babies died within an hour but this fact did not deter the father and his fellow countrymen from enjoying the usual christening feast of good shings to eat and drink. The dead the State on the ground of the State's finances Pittsburg Post. J] W. Peunypacker on Tuesday fin Yis work as Governor of Pennsylva- via, office be yielded the same day to his successor, Edwin 8. Stuart. The re- cord of his administration can now be easily summed up. Many who ardently supported his election bave been much dis- appointed in his guberuatorial career and there will be few regrets expressed in any quarter over its termination. Governor Penny packer entered upon his term with the reputation of heing ly honest, and he finishes it without any allegation having heen made of his having been gail- ty of corrupt ices. He undoubtedly prevented considerable evil legislation be- ing enacted by making known in advance his intention to vote such measures as he perceived to be dangerous. Unfortunately he permitted some measures to go upon the statute books which he might well have disapproved. The great weakness of Governor Penny- packer was his singular and absolute blind- ness to the real character of State political leaders to whom he owed his selection for the governorship and to the evils of the machine built up aod fostered by the or- ganization of which they were the direc tors. In his eyes these men could do no wrong, although history has already con- demved them. He could see po evils in the government of Pennsylvania worthy of mention. But in spite of this he was com- lied to call an extra session of the Legis- ture to enact measures to remedy many evils. Although all parties in the Com- monwealth bave declared the need for far- ther reform legislation by this Legislature, Governor Pennypacker’s last message made no plea for such reforms. The piece of leg- islation in which he took the most interest Juving his Seri was the Ja whieh he Sond. y hoped would prevent newspapers t! e State telling the truth about the polit. ical leaders he worshiped, and which sig- ally failed of its purpose. e greatest blot upon Governor Penny- packer’s administration will be his action in og with the Juruitbing of ee new tol. ough repu to be a lawyer and judge of ability, yet in this matter he seems to bave shown the utmoss ignorance or disregard of the law. He sanc- tioned the payment of millions of dollars without understanding the manner in which the bills were made up or how the work charged for in them was performed. From all the evideuce it seems that the State lost by his blindness and incapacity in this master probably $06,000,000, for which it has received no value. Aud while he permitted this extravagance to go on he at the same time cut down the appropria- tions for the insane avd the charities of e condition such action necessary. It is doubtful if a Governor who was personally corrupt could have cost the State more than bas Governor Penny er’s blindness to the fanlts and the es of the machine leaders and their friends. In his appointments to office Governor Peuny er did both well and ill. Some of his appointments were excellent. But it must he remembered also that he put or retained in office men like Israel W. Dar- ham, David Martin and John A. Berkey and that he pesmitten the insurance and banking and highway departments to be ran by politicians for political rather than buisness purposes. Governor Pennypacker was unsuited by nature and training to properly administer the duties of his office daring the critical period of the last four years. Had be been clearer sighted and de- termined to do his utmoss to improve the government of the State he could have ac- complished much for the good of its people. But bad he the necessary qual- ities for such work he would never have been selected by the machine leaders as their candidate for Governor. Whether his successor, however, will do any better than he did remains to be seen. Architect Huston’s Explanation.’ From the Altoona Times, Architect Huston, in a statement sent to Attorney General Carson, denies that $9,000,000 were expended for trimmings for the state capitol, but gives facts and figures tending to show that of the $13,000, 000 spent upon the building over $7,000, 000 went for construction. The architect is a very simple-minded man if he believes this explanation will help the case of the board of public buildings and grounds any. There was no authority for expending $7,000,000 on the construction of ae cap- itol, no matter what the authority may have been for expending enormous sums upon the furnishiogs. The only appropria- tion made for construction was $4,000,000. The ure, apparently with the inten- tion of the expenditures well with- in this ion, explicitly provided in the a tion bills of 1905 and 1906 that no part of the money appropriated for furnishings and repairs should be used to complete the new capitol. How, then, can the expenditure of over $3,000,000 for the purpose which the Legis- lature prohibited be explained? What ex- case can the public buildings and grounds committee offer for oversteppiog its anthor- ity? Sarely no exigency could arise that could make the will of a few men para- mount to expliot legislative enactment. Guggenhelm's Wealth, From the Chicago Public. One of the friendly descri of Simon Guggenheim, who is slated for Republican senator from Colorado—a description that we find in the Denver correspondence of the Cincinnati Eoquirer—praises him for having ‘‘gct his wealth from nature's store- house.” That would be praise indeed, if it were true. Bat the fact seems 10be; yt that Mr. Guggenheim got his wealth nature's , but that he got the storehouse. With that ‘‘cinch’’ upon their industry the miners gave him the wealth. "This is another touch of winter and child was buried Sunday afternoon in the Catholic cemetery. the ice men are beginning to sit up and take notice. Spawls from the Keystone, i ~The Eichard Coal and Coke company, of | Connellsville, has purchased 208 acres of | eoking coal lands in Stickel hollow, Fayette i county, from James Clark, for $375,000, Two | hundred coke ovens will be constructed. | —There are three sisters in Chester county | whose ages sum up 273 years. They are Mrs. | Elizabeth Rambo, of West Chester, aged 93 | years; Aun Cloud, of East Gorben township, {aged 91 and Mrs. Hannah Iliff, of West ma | Chester, aged 89. ~The license court opened Monday in Schuylkill county, and there are 448 apoli- cations for new stands. The law and order society has remounstrances against all these and it expeets to knock out about three- fourths of them. —Last Saturday Abraham Francis, aged 81 years, and Mrs. Anna Snowden, aged 87 years, were married at York, but their hon- eymoon was cut short, as on Thursday a warrant was served on Francis charging him with being a bigamist. —8. M. McCormick Esq., of Lock Haven, city clerk snd a leading member of the Clin- ton county bar, was found unconscious in his bathroom last Thursday at his home in the above city and died in a few minutes, Heart disease was'the cause. ~The annual report of the controller of Lavcaster county shows the snug sum of $141,609.32 in the county treasury. Appro- priatione for the ensuing year to the amount of $428,500 are suggested. The county tax rate is two and one half mills. —The Ninth internal revenue district of this State leads all others in the United States in the number of cigars made in 1906, having produced 763,702,018 during the year. One half of these were made in Lancaster county. The output required 14,766,543 pounds of tobacco. ~The Rockhill Iron and Coal company has purchased the Grove quarry farm in Blacklog valley, Huntingdon county. This is the farm on which is located the quarry from which the limestone is obtained for the Rockhill furnace and the supply is said to be almost inexhaustible. ~Mrs. Frank Uratio and little grandson five years old occupied the same sleeping room upstairs in their Franklin street home in DuBois Wednesday night, when the house caught fire on the first floor and all efforts to save them from a horrible fate were futile and upavailing. It was a most heartrending affair, ~The movement to build a hospital in the Panther valley of the anthracite coal region between Tamaqua and Lansford is assured. L. A. Riley, president of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation company, will farnish a site of six acres and makes a contribution of $1,000 besides and the employees of the com- pany, numbering 5,000, have pledged $12, 000. The cost is to be $50,000. —Thieves entered the house of Mrs. W. W. Daugherty, of Satishurg, Indians county, recently, and stole two overcoats of her brother, J. A. Richards, agent at the Penn- sylvania railroad station. In the hurry to get away through a window Mrs. Daugher~ ty’s coat and furs were dropped, the latter on the porch and the former in the window. A hat of Mr. Richards was also dropped in the back yard. —Mary Carris, aged 16 years, was discov- ered in the home of Mrs. Peter Milmore, McKeesport. She fought desperately to es- cape, but Mrs. Milmore is a powerful woman and held her confined in a room until the police arrived. After her arrest she com- fessed that she had been a burglar for months. She stole jewelry to the value of nearly $2,000 from another McKeespolt home the day before. —A number of persons about Hatboro, Montgomery county, having been robbed of their best poultry, Samuel Nice, who had suffered losses several times, placed a bur. glar alarm in his poultry house with a bell in his bedroom. Friday night the bell rang, when Nice hurried out with a shot gun and succeeded in capturing William Pope witha dozen fine chickens in his possession. He has been committed for trial. —Richard Foote, of Altoona, had a narrow escape from being burned in the Miller hotel at Lewistown on Saturday night. He had retired for the night and was awakened by the cries of fire, which was burning in the room adjoining, the flames having already eaten their way through to his room. Clad in his night clothes he escaped to the street, bat the fire was checked before it had spread much and he returned to bed in another room. —Coming home from school, two children of George M. Mellott, a farmer in Belfast township, Fulton county, found their home deserted and the doors left open. Anxiously they searched through every room for their father, and, failing to find him, went to the barn, where they discovered his corpse on the floor. One of the terrified children stood guard while the other ran after the nearest doctor. The latter said that Mellott must bave died of heart disease several hours be- fore. —(ieorge Scott, of Philipsburg, general manager of Irish Bros. extensive bituminous coal operations, was at Portage Friday, tak- ing with him money to pay the employees at Puritan mine, near that place. While he was making an inspection of the mine he left two thousand dollars of the money in charge of the engineer and fireman, who locked it in a tool box. A few minutes after Mr. Scott had left the engine room a suppos- ed miner rushed in and said Mr. Scott want- ed to see the engineer and fireman iv the mine. When they returned from what proved to be a fool's errand the tool box was open and the money gone. —The mystery concerning the disappear- ance of Rev. John Van Horn, 8 well known Presbyterian clergyman of Sugar Hill, a small town near DuBois, was ended Wednes- day night, when he appeared at a hotel at Falls Creek and after registering his name retired to his room and fired a bullet through his brain, dying instantly. Mr, Van Horn had been missing since last Mon- day, and although the police of all the neighboring towns were searching for him no trace was found until he showed up Wed- nesday night. It was thought that he was mentally unbalanced and while in this con. dition killed himself. He left a farewell letter to his wife but gives no reason for the taking of his life.