BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Siings. —Yesterday morning made many a red nose turn blue, —The ice man is happy again. Nature is fixing it up for him now, sare enough. —I¢ is just Bellefonte’s luck to have her water pumps out of commission at a time when there is more water than evough to run them. —Mr. Governor SWETTENHAM might have thought that Admira! DAVIS wanted to benevolently assimulate bim and bis Jamaicans. ~J. PIERPONT MORGAN is to retire from business, i ¢, he will still own the country, but he will permit someone else to manage it for bim. —In re-electing Senator BAILEY the Leg- islatare of Texas has done what Pennsyl- vania invariably does. Vote first, investi- gate afterwards. —Aholish the Indian school at Carlisle ? Never! The most picturesque feature of our great fall foot-ball games would be gone and the country won’t stand for that, -~Why does Gen. FUNSTON fuss because masons and hod carriers are paid more money thao army officers. There is time for him to serve an apprenticeship as eit! er trade. —WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN was thrown violently out of a sleigh a few days ago and already some Republicans are quaking lest he might have had his ear to the ground. — Representative THOMAS has introd need an anti-treating bill in the Legislature at Harrisburg. Do you think it will pass? No, not so long as men have voice enough left to say ‘‘Have one on me.” ~The islands of the sea disappear before the frequent tidal waves like the babies on the ball racks at our county fairs ; except that old Neptune doesn’t get a cigar every time he knocks an island down. —There must be something wrong with that Panama job. SHONTZ has resigued as chief engineer. He wae getting a salary of thirty thousand dollars a year and men are not giving up such things without cause. —Those selfish MarLBOROUGHS ! How mean of them to get at and fix up all their family differences without banging out the usual amount of dirty linen on the public wash line. Now the CASTELLANES didn’t act that way. ~The THAW trial is on in New York so that during its tedious progress yon need not expect to find much real news in the metropolitan dailies. It will all be THAW, even to such silly details as the brand of toilet paper HARRY uses. —One who is supposed to be the best dressed woman in all of Eogland is in this country now. Possibly she merits she dis- tinction hut she will discover that when it comes to convincing us she will find that moss of us are from Missouri. —The Machiue is after Gen. GosiN. The Senate is to refuse to confirm his appoint- ment as Major General of the N. G. P. be. cause at sandry times he declined to climb onto the QUAY band wagon. The infer- ence is that the head of the Goard must be a Machine gun. —The floods along the Ohio are causing millions of dollars in property loss and un- told hardships for persons living along the river bottoms. The watersare higher than they have been since 1883 and thousands of families are homeless. Surely for disas- ters 1907 is starting in well. —Aud to think! Some one is actually trying to introduce the civil service reform practice in Pennsylvania. Yon know about how much chance such a bill would have in getting through the Legislatare of this State where fitness counts for vothing and Machine oilers are what is wanted. —It is rnmored that boss PENROSE is growing tired of giving orders over the long distance telephone and threatens to appear in person in Harrisburg unless there is a better showing of machine froits. All this is very distasteful to Governor STUART and a few others who are enjoying some liberties they wonld no: have were PEN- ROSE on the ground, but what are they going to do about it? PENROSE is the boss aod if he wants to go to Harrisharg he'll go and be’ll do the bossing, too. _=—And now it comes to pass that eleven gallons of alcobol can be distilled from a ton of green corn cobs, from a tou of green corn stalks two hundred and forty pounds of a fermentable substance that can be con- verted into the finest champagne ean be se- cured, while the waste product can be used for paper stock. Ifthe price of the con- verting machive it not too high you need not he surprised to learn of our offering to take corn on subscription. For what use could a printer have for money with all those dazzling possibilities in corn. —Tomorrow the primaries will be held in Centre county. They are the beginning of political organism. If they are good, controlled hy men of good motives, the re- sults will be good, but if left to the manip- ulation of political backs and petty place hunters the results cannot but he unsatis- factory. Yon are a citizen enjoying the greatest gift of a Republican form of gov- ernment. It is as much your duty to pro. tect that government as it is the duty of the government to protect youn and if you do not attend the primaries you are shirk. ing yourdaty. If youn are for reform, strike at the root of the evil by going to the pri. maries for there is where machines ges their start and their fostering care. _YOL. 52 ties are borrowing trouble. longed regular session of the Legislature, ‘adjourned session,” during which the indicated will be achieved. The maj rity of the committee will coincide with the re- civil proceedings will not lie and for the sans criminal prosecutions are session to reach that conclusion. It will | be accomplished at the regular session and without much circumlocution. Adjourned | sessions cost the machine money. Oar esteemed metropolitan contempo. | raries are too credulous [or anything. They | appear to believe that a considerable nam- ber of the Republicans in the present Gen- eral Assembly are bent on certain import- ant reforms and will create all kinds of trouble unless they are adopted. Asa mat- ter of fact, however, ninety-nine out of | every hundred Republican Legislators care | infinitely more for personal iofluence and | recognition than civic reform. Take the Tioga county members, for example. Daur- | ing the special session of a year ago HiTCH- COCK wore the surface off the carpet be- tween his seat and the Speaker's chair run- ning back and forward for orders and the Speaker was the notorious and still nore- generate WALTON. Our metropolitan con- temporaries, moreover, accepted the work of that session aw a labor of reform while in reality it was simply a plea in confession and avoidance. The HitcHCOCKS will play the same game again and because they have access to the ear of the Chair will support any legislation that is satisfactory to the machive. The majority of the dominant element in the Legislature wonld stand for an extra session, probably, because they get pay for an extra session and mileage and perqui- sites. Bat it iy doubtful if the wavagers of the machine woald consent to an extra session for the reason that the people might resent such a palpable outrage as that bill of expense for purely partisan purposes, The machine wants to recover the state treasury vext fall and it will adopt the easiest and surest way to thas result which is not the vindication of the grafters through either an adjourned or a special gession. The whitewashing will, be done at the regular session and with sufficient expedition to minimize the burden upon the pockets of the faithful Senators and Representatives. This is not official bot you cau bet that it is accurate. ~The administration at Washington has determined to “‘ignore’’ the Kingston incident which is wise. A burglar eaught ‘with the goods on him,” is usually wil- ling to forget and forgive, Our national vanity may have been jolted somewhat hy the recent exchange of compliments between Governor General SWEITENHAM, of the British colony of Jamaica, and Admiral DAVIS, of the United States navy at Kingston. After the earth. quake Adwiral DAVIS went to the scene of the calamity with two battleships and a cruiser. Hin ‘ostensible purpose was to furnish relief to the sofferers and contiib- ute in every possible way to the ameliora- tion of the distress which prevailed. Is was both humanitarian and progressive, Promptness is as essential as liberality in the face of disaster and the whole world applauded the promptness and generosity of the American admiral. But he didn’t sobsequently proceed along right lines to carry out his humani- tarian aime. He sigoalized his arrival at the port by firing a «salute which frighten- ed the natives, already terrorized, intoa belief of a rec of the disaster. That might bave it bad been the worst. But it wasn’t. Admiral Davis debarked a considerable force of sailors and marines and undertook not only te the stricken city, bat to direct its sanitary affairs. He wanted to superintend the barying of the dead as well as the of the living and to regu- late everythi The result was jost what might have been expected. The British Governor of the colony resented the intrusion, nos to ay orion of anthority, and request. ed the American admiral io remove all his arwed forces from the territory of the colony. Toecaunal observers it may have been a drastic remedy for an imaginary evil. Bat as 4 matter of fact is was almost A necessary comise to pursae. As Governor SWETTENHAM said, the robbery of a mil- lionaire in Néw York afforded no exonse for “a British admiral landing an armed party’ to the New York police. In Troubled Clty Contemporaries, | Our esteemed metropolitan contempora- | Be That is to say, | Harrisbarg, according to press dispatches they are imagining that after a rather pro- |trom that city, and Governor STUART is committee to investigate the *‘Palace of | Graft” will be submitted and considered, | and incidentally the grafters will be excul- | : pated. We have no doubs that the result | Erriorr RODGERS, of Pittsburg. Scott, | Keyser and McNicHoLL, of Philadelphia, think the Pittshurger is too fresh and de- cent Attorney General in his opinion that | e because the frauds have been consummated | before he undertakes to direct veterans in that the giafters were faithful parti- | TR gla not candi | 30d PENROSE is inclined to take them by overlooked, however, if other words interference was inexous- able. i ” i i $ sw STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNIO Penrose and Sinart. Senator PENROSE is anxious to get to strongly averse to such a thing. The exist. there will be what is technically calied an | vg conditions at the State capital don’s suit the big boss and he wants to straight. en them oat. Some of the State Senators refuse to yield obedience to the PENROSE “floor walker’’ in that chamber, Senator clare that he ought to get his seat warm the business. Thas far long-distance or- ders have failed to subdue the recaleitrants ent. Bat there will not be an adjourned | the collar. But the presence of PENROSE would be embarrassing to the new Governor who continues to keep up the pretense of inde- pendence of the machine. The appoint. ment of MCAFEE as Secretary of the Com- monwealth and concurrence in PENNY. PACKER'S appointment of DAVE MARTIN a8 Insurance Commisioner make STUART'S pretense difficult enough without having Pexrose hanging like a millstone on his neck. But there is urgent need of a strong hand at the helm and the Seuator doesn’t feel like taking chances of an out. break which his friends say is impending, They know that if PENROSE were on the ground the opposition to RONGERS would vanish ‘“‘like the baseless fabric of a vis- ion,” and that comparatively speaking the objections of the Governor are unimport- ant. All things considered we are inclined to the opinion that the Senator will bave his way. RODGERS is as anxious to have him in Harrisburg as STUART is to keep him away and it is a good guess that STUART will yield in this matter as he did in the matter of the appointment of MCAFEE. He bad made up his mind to dismiss thas Pittsburg politician from the service of the State. He Lad even gone so far, according to fairly well authenticated gossip, as to tell PENROSE and GEORGE OLIVER that be conldn’s burden his administration with such political flotsam. Bat in the end the appointment was made, notwithstanding the aversion to it and PENROSE will bave his way in this other matter as well, ——1I the Jamaican incident will serve to admonish our Admirals that the sover- eignty of the President doesn’t extend to the end of the earth in all directions, it will not be entirely withont value. That mis- understanding might lead at some time to consequences more painful than the re- buke banded to Admiral Davis at King- ston the other day. General Carsons's Perfidy. Attorney General CARSON has disap. pointed no intelligent observer of events by his report practically excalpating the grafters in the capitol building operations, Mr. CARSON has not said exactly that there was no graft in the construction and fur- nishing of the building. That would be too palpable a falsehood. But he bas said that transactions having been completed there is no use in trying to recover hy oiv- il process and for the reason that no actual criminality has been revealed it isn’t worth while to proceed against the grafters in the criminal courts. Such absurdities have probably never before been embodied in an official decument. State Treasurer BERRY has olearly shown that immense sums were paid by the Board of Public Grounds and Buildings for work and materials thas bad already been paid for by the Capitol Building Commission- ere, or at least had been ivcluded in the schedule upon which the bids for the eon- struction of the bu‘lding were based. He has shown that inferior materia's were used where superior materials were contracted for and the price for the best material was charged and paid. He has proved that un- usual methods of awarding contracts were employed in order that favored contractors would have advantage and that duplicate payments were made in several instances and to the aggregate of vast sums. Notwithstanding these facts the late At- torney General has given an opinion that the criminals can’t be forord to make res- titution or be panished in any way. He bas indeed proved himself a subservient in- strument of the machive. If such an opin. ion bad come from come of the machine pettylogeers it would have provoked ridi- cule. Coming from a man who professes to ocoupy a respectable position among the lawyers of she State it simply inspired con- tempt. It is the more regrestable, more. over, because b fore HaMPTON L. CARSON came under the malign influence of the machine be professed to desire juss govern- ment and pretended to advicate ocivie righteousness. But that opinion marks him as the servile tool of a corrups gang. ——Senator TILLMAN is not discreet but he was acourate, the other day, in his esti- mate of his colleagues who have sacrificed conscience and betrayed principle in order to win the favor of the President. It was a stultification of the Senate. rip» The Ratllroad Commissioner Bill Mr. Creasy’'s bill creating a Board of Railroad Commissioners will encounter a good many spags during its progress through the Legislature, the most for- midable of which, probably, being the fact tbat he is a Democrat. Both parties are practically pledged to such legislation and there ought to be no partisan polities either in the measure or its consideration. Bat the Republicans are exceedingly sensitive on the point of precedence and imagine that all the prestige of the reform would not come to them if a bill introduced by a Democrat should hecome alaw. They put a rather scant estimate upon the intelli- geuce of the people and think the average man caa be fooled by trifles. They will probably insist on substituting another hill for that of Mr. CREASY. There is some question as to the covstitu- tionality of the proposed legislation, more- over, which may be difficult to overcome. The fundamental law vests in the Secre- tary of Internal Affairs the regulation of railroads and those who are opposed to regulation will probably insist that the an- thority lodged in she Board of Railroad Commissioners by the Creasy bill is al- ready located by the covstitution in the Secretary of Internal Affairs. That con- tention will be impaired in force to some extent by the fact that Governor STUART bas recommended legislation along those lines nod that his Attorney General, said to be an expert in constitutional law, has advised him on the subject. But it will be vsed against the bill, nevertheless, most assiduously. In any event, however, the value of such legislation if enacted and enforced would be worth the experiment. There is press. ing and iuvsistent cause for compelling the railroads to show some measure of respect for the organic law of the State and if the Secretary of Internal Affairs bas the au- thority and fails to exercise it, there ought to be a compelling force or the removal of the authority. There is a possibility, of course, that enabling legislation is neces- sary to put that provision of the constitu- tion into operation as there is to make the seventeenth article of that ipstrument ef- feétlive. Iv’ that event he plain Quty of the Legislature is to enact such legislation aud that is practically all Mr. CREASY and the Democrats want. —General GOMEZ, the Cuban libera. tor, bas been fined for cockfighting. That is pretty tough but the old man may find comfort in the fact that there are traditions which incolpate the late GEORGE WASH- INGTON in some of the frivolities of sport- ing life, A Philosopher's Notion. The most comprehensive answer that has heen or will be given to President RoOSE- VELT's demand for two battleships as large or larger than the British colossus, the Dreadnaught, is contained in the closing paragraph of philosopher DOOLEY'S recent dissertation on diplomacy. Mr. FINLEY PETER DUNNE, she author of the Dooney philosophy, is not only a master of humor bat like MARK TwaIN, he is a satitist and philosopher of the highest standard of ex- cellence. Each of his articles point a mor- al and though the Irish brogue is hardly an adornment the Irish wit is as keen as any ever written and the satire quite as pene- trating. Alter summarizing the requirements and achievements of modern diplomacy in an article published last Sunday Mr. DooLEY ghides gracefully into a reference to what may, by courtesy, be called the Japanese incident. “I heerd HoGaAN say,” he writes, ‘‘there was talk in the Euglish pa- pers iv goin’ to war with us ahont Japan,” said Mr. HENNESSY. “I'd like to see it. D'ye think they will?’ “The English pa- pers,” said Mr. DooLEy, “like our own, ar-re condocted by renowned warryors, Bat do ye think if there was on’y waan butcher shop in th’ city I'd thry to wreck it?” There is the whole master in a nut- shell. No wise man will cat off his only sourae of food supply. There is no coutingency as remote as a war between this country and any Euro- peau power. In fact it may be safely said that no such thing could occur unless we should in some way mortally offend anoth- er government. This country i= now and destined to be for years the gravaty of the wotld. No foreign government could sab- sist either in peace or war without access to the food supplies of the United States. Even if Canadian grain resources are devel. oped to the fall measure of expectations Great Britain conldn’s afford a war with us for the reason that food would then be contraband. For that reason we have no more need for big ships than for flying machines, : —— It has been discovered that there is a modest man living in the West who has a fortune far exceeding shat of Rocke- FELLER. Bas his methods of arquiring it having been different and the necessity of “'squaring’’ less insistent, he has escaped the criticism of the oil magnate. : re ——— The Congressional Salary Grab, | From the Pittsburg Dispatch (Ind. Rep.) The proposed increase of congressional salaries by filty per cents may not deserve the description, depending upon whether the sort of representatives we get for the larger amount is worth that much wore, but the action of the Honse last Friday was on the grab principle. No other char- acterization will fit the unsavory methods taken to ges the increase through without placing the members on record. When, after judicious preparation of the public mind for the , the House took up the legislative appropriation bill earlier in the session the courage of the members failed them and passed the measure along to the Senate with increases for only the Vice President, the Speaker and the members of the Cabinet. It was the House idea then that the Senate would take the responsibility for making the in- crease general, but the Senate refused to pull the House chestnuts out of the fire, Thus balked the plan put through was de- vised. Littaner of New York, who retires with this session and consequently had nothing to fear, was chosen to move the amendment for the general increase. Har- ry calls summoned the members. Instant. ly there was a babel of protest—{or publi- cation only—against railroading through the increase without a roll call. Bat when the motion was put there was *‘a resound. ing chorus of yeas, while the nays were noticeable through their absence.’ A di- vision showed 138 votes for to 92 against, And that these 92 were not anxious to Learry their opposition to extremes was shown upon the motion of an Arkansas wember for a roll call. Only 34 of the 92 seem to have been in earnest, and the Speaker ruled the number not sufficient. The House had raised its salary withont being put on record and all was well. The Senate's concurrence is taken for granted. It is trae the increase does not take effect until the next Congress, but most of the members of this will be members of the next. The country would not have been dis- posed to complain of the increase if the members proved themselves worthy of it. But the lack of backbone exhibited in this sneaking through of a raise the Honse bad not the courage to vote openly will hardly convince the public that that class of rep. resentatives are worth the money. —————— Iniquitons Harvard. From the New York Press. Au iron founder of Pennsylvania, having risen from penury to opulence, sent his son to Harvard University. The boy was bright, diligent, and gradoated with hon- ors. Three weeks after the boy’s return to bis home in Pittsburg the iron founder sought his pastor. “I'm greatly worried about William John since his return from Harvard,” he- gan the father. ‘Ah, I warned you against Harvard. He has become a drunkard,” interrupted the good man. ‘No, no; I asked him to take a drink with me several times and he wouldn't.” ‘‘He bas become entangled with some creatare of the chorus 2’ ‘No; be knows no such women.’ **Ah, it is worse; he gambles?’ ‘No; he don’t know one card from another.” ‘I see—I see—it is far, far worse. Har- vard is a Unitarian university. He has come back a heathen ?'’ The unhappy father groaned. than all that. iff reform !"’ “Worse Doctor, he believes in tar- Roosevelt an Immense Joke, From the Clearfield Republican. Many of President Roosevelt's critios have charged bim with borrowing, stealing, and appropriating the ideas of William J. Bryan during the past ten years and with trying to imitate the great Nebraskan as a champion of the common people. Bat he has never yet imitated Bryan in the mas- ter of consistency. Up to the present day Bryan was never found on both sides of any question, nor has be ever side-stepped or back-tracked when ouce he took a posi tion on any important question. As an imitator of Bryan Roosevelt is worse than a failure; be is an immense joke and by the time the end of his present term arrives his stock as a popular idol will be down below the thirty cent mark. Tom Johnson's Hard—Earned Triumph, From the Chicago Public, After six years’ work of the hardest kind, full of perplexities, often disheartening, and sometimes apparently futile, Tom L. Johnson is now upon the threshold of a cam- paign for the establishment of municipal ownership in Cleveland. The reason he is only on the threshold, is because the law at presents permits bim to go no farther. Bus the traction combine of his city is at the end cof its high rate goudititivies and bas offered to surrender. Nothing remains to be done, so far as it is concerned, but to appraise its property fairly and execute the documents. S—— Carson's Explanation. From the McKeesport News, ‘‘Have you been guilty of grafting?" asked Mr. Carson of the architect. ‘*No,”’ that gentleman replied. Tnereupon Mr. Carson addressed the contractor, “Kuow of ang gralt?"’ he inquired. “I do not,’ said the contactor. Thereupon, having concluded a 8earch- ing investigation, Mr. Carson informed the State of Pennsylvania that he could dis- cover no trace of graft. Er—just so Large Tank of a Smal Small Man, From the Springfield Republican. John Sharp Williams's campaign ‘‘to save Mr. Bryan from himself” will he watched wish interest. No one hitherto has ever sncoeeded in that undertaking, al- though several have tried. It is usually found that Mi. Bryan, hy a curious perver- sity of his vature, does not like to be saved from himself, A, ‘besides, it onghs to occur to Mr. Williams that a wan who 1eally bas to he saved from himself is not the sort thas the country moet desire for ite i A HE LA MSs FB a RR Spawls from the Keystone, —Charles Mihleder, a barber, of Franklin, Venango county, has sold a miniature elee- tric city of his own construction to a Pitts. burg syndicate for $40,000. It is a mechan— ical marvel and Mr. Mibleder worked seven years on its construction. —Bedford citizens are rejoicing over the fact that they may soon have their mail de- livered to their doors. The postoflice re— ceipts at Bedford during 1906 amounted to almost $10,000. They hope to make up the difference which will entitle them to free delivery service, —Recently a charter was granted the Big Valley Street Railroad company to build twenty-seven miles of road beginning at Mill Creek, Huntingdon couuty, and ex- tending to Reedsville, Mifflin county. Cap- ital $162,000. R. W. Jacobs, Huntingdon, is the president of the company. —Mrs. Margaret H. Philips, of Shamokin, who lived a sort of hermit life apparently in want, died on Saturday when it was found that she had twenty $20 gold pieces sewed in little bags about her waist and was siso the possessor of goverment bounds upon which the interest had not been collected. —According to the Pennsylvania Grange News, Pennsylvania leads all the States in the union in grange development. During the past year 358 new granges have been es- tablished and 17 re-organized. The whole number of granges organized throughout the State was 249 and the number re-or ganized was 66. ~The announcement has just been made public of the wedding of Dr. Thomas 8S. Wilcox, the well known young Williamsport dentist, and son of Rev. T. 8. Wilcox, formerly of Philipshurg, to Miss Jessie M. Gunter, also of Willismsport, and which took place in Elmira, N. Y., in August last. ~The Marshall furnace in East Newport is to be enlarged, the capacity increased, and more men given employment, which wiil be glad news to the residents of that com- munity. The furnace is now making from fifty to seventy-five tons of iron in twenty- four hours and this is to be increased to 100 or 150 tous. —By order of the mayor a raid is being made on the thousands of sparrows that gather on the trees of the court house square in Wilkes'Barre. A band of sharp: shooters goes to work as soou as the birds begin to settle in the evening and 1.000 were killed on Friday evening. The Italians gather the dead birds and make pot pie out of them. —A two-headed calf, well formed, is a new addition to the livestock owned by Albert Berger, a farmer living about one mile from Newberrytown, York county. The animal has two perfectly formed heads, with three eyes in cach head, two mouths and all the natural senses on both heads. The calf was born on Sunday. It is frisky and eats from both mouths. —8ix masked men entered the home of Stephen Chester, near Byrnesville, North- umberland county, on Thursday night, bound Mr. and Mrs. Chester and burned’ them with a hot poker to force them to tell where their money was as Chester, it was believed, had considerable money about the house. After ransacking the house the men fled, leaving the inmates unconscious, and their condition is critical. —Leah Gift, aged 80 years, 11 months and 25 days, died at Burnhaw, Miflin county, Junuary 16. She was born in Centre town. ship, Union county now Franklin township, Snyder county, Pa. She was never outside of her native county until the fall of 1906, and never road on a railroad train before November 12, 1906. She never saw a trolley car or rode on one before the above date. She was the last in her generation of rela- tives. — Lewisburg has been robbed of one of its most substantial industries by the removal of the Monroe H. Kulp & Co. lumbering equipment to Oldtown, Md. and scores of men arc thrown out of employment. For ten years this corporation has operated in the timber lands of the Nittany mountains and has removed millions of feet of logs, but now the woods have been stripped and the company has directed its efforts to new fields. —A Sunbury man has a pair of slippers that are made of dermis or epidermis, or to be wore plain, skin taken from the body of a man who was killed near Williamsport some years ago. [It appears that no one came forward to claim the body and it eventually got into a hospital in this State where it was dissected. One of the surgeons there is also interested in a tannery and he had a portion of the skin tanned. It later was sent to a Muncy shoemaker who ‘made a number of pocketbooks and & pair of slippers from it. } —Willinmn Buck, who had been foreman and bookkeeper for John E. Detweiler, a cigar manufacturer, of Red Lion, York county, for ten years, went to York last Friday and surrendered himscif to an alder: mau, confessing that he bad robbed his em- ployer of about $600 the past year. He was imprisoned, but Detwiler came and asked for his release saying he had helped him to make money and that he would forgive his offense and reinstate him with an increase of $10 per month in his wages. —Fires have been started in the new blast-furnace which was recently completed at Josephine, Indiana county, and on Wed- nesday the mammoth plant, which was erected at a cost of $1,000,000, was put in full operation. The plant has a capacity of 1,000 tons per day and will employ 125 men. Stones and blowing machinery have been installed for two furnaces and when the second one is completed, which will be some time during the present year, the capacity of the plant will be doubled. " “Last week Abram L. Houch, a tobacco farmer, residing near New Holland, Lan- caster county, delivered his last year's crop in Lancaster, was paid $600 for it, went to New Holland, visited several hotels, became intoxicated, went home after dark and next morning discovered that his monéy was gone. Later be accused J. 8. Bard and John Woomer with having robbed him. They were arrested and lodged in juil, but Sun. day moruing Joseph Berler found the purse with $545, on the highway near Naw Hol land, and the accused were liberated.