ER By P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —The country is at rest. Congress has adjourned. —March winds are chill to stock market lambs. —It is snow-water for the Democrats from this council, all right enough. —What the Centre Democrat said about our new postmaster was impressive. the shorn —Dr. WAGNER calls it ‘circular in- sanity.” We always thought it was just plain “wheels.” — Russia has a new Doma, but new Dumas in Russia are about as much good as revolutions in South America. ~All president ZELAYA, of Nicaraugua, needs to satisfy hie ambition to become the NaAPoLEON of Central America is a Water- loo and he will likely get it. —It district attorney JEROME cuts any more capers like he did on Tuesday the TaAw lawyers will counter by asking for a commission to inquire into his sanity. —In two weeks more spring will be here, but that is no reason for shedding your flannels. On the 24th of March, 1906, thermometers registered four degrees below zero. ~The saloons in Philadelphia are to be closed on ST. PATRICK'’Sday. This does not necessarily mean the complete elimination of the annual celebration in honor of the patron saint. —A convicts in the Columbus, Ohio, pris- on has just made for himsell a set of false teeth ont of old steel boggy tire. Good- ness, gracious, what tough food the prieon- ers must ges in that pen, ~The publio will await with interest the outcome of the experiment of having a girls club in Bellefonte. Inasmuch as knitting and gossipping are not to be pro- hibited is will probably be very popular. — Every man, woman and child in Mas- sachusetts produced three hundred dollars worth of manufactured goods and fifteen dollars worth of agricultural products in 1905. The latter were probably all beaus. —That Beaver county justice of the peace who decided that a young man who grab- bed a girl on she street and bugged and kissed ber was not guilty of ‘‘assanlt’’ bus of ‘“‘embracery’’ has a judgment as aps as an eye to the eternal fitness of things. —Because cock-fighting and lottery gambling have been prohibited on the Is- land it bas been discovered that the Cubans are lapsing into a state of laziness that is not good for them. They say that now they have nothing to earn money for there is no need of working. —President W. E. Corey, of the United States Steel corporation, bas put in an emphatio denial of the statement that he will retire from his office at the next an- nual meeting. Probably he thinks so hus then the great steel trust has a way of just dumping men that COREY ought to koow something about. ~The first luncheon of the new Secreta- ry of the Treasury, alter he had taken of- fice consisted of 8 mug of balf-and-half, a fried egg sandwich and a piece of hot mince pie. If Secretary CORTELYOU can stand a dose like that he onght to he able to stom- ach most anything those Wall street bank- ers put up to him. -=The poor Duchess of Marlborough is to come home to do colony work in New York. It is just possible that had she looked over the great city she is about to try to help before she wasted her millions on a worthless titled foreigner she might have found a man who wouldn’s bave driv- en her to such distress. —Just to bring yon to a realization of your remissness in keeping track of the government that you would give your life to defend, if needs be, we wans to ask you how many of the thirty-four thousand eight hundred and seventy-nine bills, that the last Congress passed on are you familiar with. Just think a moment! Can you even name five of all these thousands of acts. —AD FAUBLE and “TiM’’ FENLON have launched a boom for Benator RAYNER for the Democratic nomination for President. While it is not probable that the desire of these two local political argufiers will up- ses the calounlations of the national slate makers they have hit upon a man whose name should certainly appeal to a large element of the voters of the United States. —The statement of expenses incurred in running Centre county during the year 1906 appears in this issue of the paper, but owing to the short time which we bad to go over it a digest of the statement cannot be made until next week’s issme. Mean- while all our readers should look it over carefully for it constitutes the annual ac- counting to you by the men you bave chosen to conduct your public business, —That you might about as well tackle a mad ball in an open field as to try and buck the stock market by dealing in Read- ing wae never more fully exemplified than it was on Wednesday when thas stock soar. ed by leaps and bounds for an eleven points rise while the balance of the market was weak. Of course the rumor that E. H. Harriman had succeeded in getting control of the Reading railroad was assigned as the cause bus that was not sufficient to alleviate the pangs saffered by the ‘‘shorts’” while being driven to cover. Chalrman Sheatz's “Lemon.” Representative SHEATZ, of Philadelphia, Chairman of the House committee on Ap- propriations, is already slated for the Re- publican nomination for State Treasurer. There is something suggestive, not to say sinister, about this fact. The old rule of the machine was to give the chairman of the Committee on Appropriations a small per centage of the ‘‘rake-off’” which was large. Every institution which received State aid was required to contribute and the chairman got a trifle from each draft. A few years ago this plan was altered and the chairman wa: allowed a lump som whether the graft was great or small. Two years ago another solution of the problem was devised. The nomination for State Treasurer was offered the chairman in lien of participation in the loot. J. LEE PLUM- MER was the first to accept that ‘‘lemon.” The result of Mr. PLUMMER'S experience ought to have served to admonish others against that system for years. He was overwhelmingly defeated for the eleo- tion and left a political onteast. He was himsell to blame, in part, no doubt. If he had been less servile in obeying the commands of his bosses in their looting operations, he might have preserved his honor, even if his political hopes and ambitions had been sacrificed. He wasn’$ inberently bad. There are many who be- lieve that his impulses were good and that he would have preferred toserve the peo- ple rather than the machine. Bat the canker of indordinate ambition bad taken possession of him and as another Represen - tative said of himself, he ‘‘sold himself body and soul to the machine,” and couldn't control the consequences. Chairman SHEATZ is beginning different- ly and probably =xpeots different results. That is to say, he announces that the appro- priations will be made this year according to the constitution and the law. There will be no curtailment of expeuses. He reasons, and the machine managers concur in the view, that the public is not averse to profligaoy but are opposed to chicanery. In other words, his ideas are that if chair. man PLUMMER bad framed the general ap- propriation bill of two years ago so that expenditures would have been specified, there would bave been no cause of com- plains. For that reason Mr. SHEATZ in- tends to be specific this year. No hoards will be given authority to epend to the limit of the resources and profligacy will bea virtue rather than a vice. Maybe Mr. SHEATZ is right, hut it would be far different in Missouri, where you have to show people. —Mayor WEAVER, of Philadelphia, is go- ing to Earope soon after the expiration of his term of office. If somebody over there would kidoap him it would be a great thing for Philadelphia, but what's the use of raising vain hopes. Reform Talk that is Rubbish, We have the assurance of Speaker Mc- CLAIN, of the House of Representatives at Harrisburg, that the ocampaigr pledges made in the Republican platform, and by the Republican candidate for Governor on the stump, last fall, are to be fulfilled. This is encouraging so far as it goes. The pledges embraced all sorts of reforms and were declared with snch emphasis that keeping them must work the best possible results to the people. Two cent a mile passenger rates, trolley freighte, more lib- eral appropriations to schools, greater gen- erosity in road building, the enforcement of the constitution, better election laws and economy in administration were all prom- ised in the platform or by the candidate. Thus far nothing has been done toward the maintenance of faith with the people and in the face of the record Speaker Mc. CLAIN'S talk is of listle consequence. There was a two-cent a mile rate bill passed in the House previous to the spring eleo- tion recess but it was so palpably a fraud that railroad magnates derisively laughed it through its final reading. Speak- er McCrLAIN could have corrected its fanlts. A word from hisz would have given it ade- quacy. Bat he didn’t speak the word. On the contrary be contributed his inflaence to the farce of passing it and joined in the ridicule of its inefficiency. It ‘“‘was a good enough MORGAN" until after the February election and he was satisfied. In so far as the Republican platform and candidate promised increased appropria- tions, we have no doubt the pledges will be kept. The school appropriation will be inoreased from two to four millions, the road fund will be enlarged and the appro- priation to the health department will be augmented for there are opportunities for grafs in the expenditure of money and there is politics in the manipulation of these de- partments. Bas there will be no adeqoate legislation to eaforce the constitution, no effective legislation regulating railroad rates or trolley freights and no election re. forms. Nobody knows these things better than Speaker MCCLAIN, either, and his talk on the subject is rubbish. —Subsoribe for the WATCHMAN. The Grangers Demanding Again, Our friends the Graugers are justly be- coming impatient of the delays in the pas- sage of legislation in which they are inter- ested. Ten weeks of the present session have gone by and none of the legislation promised by the domivant party before the election has been enacted. Therefore the legislative committee of the State Grange has been getting basy and at a meeting held at Harrisburg a week ago made some protests and formulated some demands. The commettee didn’t say what it will do in the event that no attention is paid by the Legislature to its propositions. In fact its demands are wanting in force hecause of this failare to be specific. No law is effective without a penalty. What the Graogers want is really well within the lines of reason in most respects. They insist on the removal of unjusé dis- crimination in the taxation of ‘‘larm prop- erty and other real estate.’ They want larger appropriations for schools and that the State shall pay a larger proportion of the expense of road buildiog and mainte- vance. They ‘‘lavor’’ a maximum two-cent passenger rate and the right of tiolleys ‘‘to carry any and all kiads of freight in coun- try distriots.”” They want ‘‘appropriate legislation to enforce Article XVII of the constitution,” and demand ‘‘the passage of the anti-trust law now before the Legisla- tare.” They are wisely opposed to the cre- ation of new offices and insist on needed amendments to the primary and general election laws. They want a few other thiogs which would do more good thao barm, besides, and it may be added thas as and it may beadded that as usoal they are both reasonable and fair. But the trouble with the Grangers is that they wants and favor and demand things and then do absolutely nothing to promote their wants and enforce their demands. The truth is thata good many of them want offices worse than they want anything else and are ready and willing to condone all the crimes of the machine if the machine will gratify sheir sometimes inordinate and frequently absurd ambition to ges office. As long as the Grangers pursue that course there will be little or nothing done for the relief of the farmers or the farms from ao- just burdens or to ameliorate the evils in administration of which the legislative committee of the State Grange so justly and forcefully complains. ——1It would probably take a thousand years to convince Mr. OLIVER that the re- jeotion of his bid to build the Panama canal was ‘‘a square deal,” or tbat President ROOSEVELT wants to be fair. Important Bill Stifled. Is may as well be assumed that the bill providing for the measurement of distances on railroads in this State has been defeat- ed. Ié was not killed outright, or strang- led openly, as such things used to be done when the Pesnsylvania railroad wanted such results. But it was re-committed in the House to a committee which will sifle it for the reason that the railroad counldn’t afford to allow it to become a law. A sim- ilar measure enacted by the Legislature of one of the New England States cost one of the prominent eastern railroads several million dollars. The Pennsylvama carry- ing corporations don’t want such extraor- dinary expenses and don’t have to have them. As a matter of fact, the measure in ques- tion bad for its objeot a just purpose. It is estimated that since the distance between poiate on the Pennsylvania railroad was fixed, cut-offs here and straightening curves there, has diminiehed the distance between Philadelphia and Pittsburg a matter of ten miles. Bat purchasers and users of mile- age books are still paying for the full dis- tance as originally fixed. A competent railroad man estimates that in that way the company is wrongfully taking $40,000 worth of mileage from the traveling public which buys thousand mile ticket books an- nuoally. The money collected in that way by the New England road referred to was recovered by the victims of the injuatice after the bill was passed aod approved. The bill was not the proper or best rem- edy, however. It would have cost the State something like $100,000 to make the proposed survey and that would have been money wasted. What the Legislature should do is enact a law compelling rail- roads to file annually with she Secretary of Internal Affairs a sworn statement of the distances between all stations on their re- spective lines. It would cost them noth- ing to make such a statements for they know every inch of the road and the effect of every change or alteration they make. Thus equipped the Secretary could do the rest and the evil which the lost bill was in- tended to correct would disappear entirely and for all time. —-—Possibly the Iunterestate Commerce commission has used Mr. E H. HARRIMAN very roughly but be doesn’t look is. In fact he appears to be quite well and hap- py. "STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., MARCH 8, 1907. Senator Spoomner's Resignation. The resignation of Senator SPOONER, of Wisconsin, can hardly be regarded as’a great public loss. He is abler than the average of his associates in the body and so far as pecuniary considerations go he may be regarded as scrupulously honest. Bat he is a partisan of the bitterest type ani as ready as any other to sacrifice principls to the exigencies of politics. Moreover he was among those who in the absence of a better designation are characterized as ‘‘corporation lawyers,’”’ and he measured the merit of service by the corporation standard. Maybe he was not paid by cor- porations for his work in their behalf bus that is really of little consequence. Sevator SPOONER gives as the reason for his retirement from public life the necessity of acquiring greater wealth. He would have the public believe, it may be infer- red, that after sixteen years service in the Senate he is poor. | Compared with some of the maulti-millionaires of the country at present, he may be little more than a man of moderate means. But as a matter of fact he is a man of considerable wealth and as he has not shown an ambition to lead either in social or finaccial life it may be said that he is possessed of an ample com- petency. His salary us Senator and his practice at the bar afforded him an income far above his present or probable necessi- ties. There are two reasons which probably in- fluenced Senator SPOONER to resign, neith- er one of which was mentioned in bis let- ter to the Governor. He felt that he couldn’s be re-elected and though his tenure was secure for a couple of years yet, he had little to gain by continuing in the office. Besides be had an opportunity to make professional engagements now which might not be possible two years hence. It is more than probable that he will become associated with the legal branch of Mr. HARRIMAN'S enterprises and from a busi- ness standpoint it would be bard to imagine a more desirable arrangement. The fact tbat Wisco opsin is likely to get a fitter man in his place has a reconciling influence,also. . g— Having fixed Mormon Apostle REED 8007 safely in his Senatorial eeat and paid bim $15,000 for his expenses in fight- iog the Christian sentiment of the country, the Republican party has proved its fidelity to the memory of MARK HANNA. If the Christian public will now apolegize to Mormon Apostle Reep Smoor for giving him so much trouble, the polygamists of Utah will have no reason for farther com- plains. Filibunstering Justified. The Democrats in the United States Senate were not only justified in filibuster- ing against the ship subsidy bill, bat they had no alternative. That measure was jammed through the house of Representa- tives in a way tbat would have been dis- graceful in a convention of anarchists. Absent men were counted as present, pairs were broken aud affirmative votes were declared from empty seats. It was even the culminating outrage of Speaker CaAN- NON'S raffianly career and if the Democrats of the Senate had not availed themselves of the opportunity to prevent the consumma- tion of such a crime, there would bave been something the matter with them. There is no valid reason for the ship sub- sidy bill other than the reason which kept REED Syo0T, the Mormon Apostle, in the Senate. Itis the result of a corrupt bar- gain between the late Senator MARK HAN- NA and a group of rich shipbuilders. Der- ing the campaign of 1900 Mr. HANNA needed money to buy votes for the Repub- lican tioket and promised the shiphuilders an immense bonus if they would contribute the fands. They entered into she agree- ment and complied with their part of it. Thus far Congress has failed to keep Sena- tor HANNA'S pledge, notwithstanding the importunities of President ROOSEVELT to to perpetrate the crime. This year it almost succeeded. The ship subsidy bill of this Congress was not the colossal fraud which its prede- cessors of other sessions have been. In fact it had been stripped of most of its grossess features in the hope that by such modification is covld be forced through. But the vicious purpose of looting the treasury in order to pay unearned bounties to party. favorites is present even in the modified bill and it was reasoned that if the comparatively harmless measure could be got through this year, the other evils could be added on some subsequent ocoa~ sion. For this reason we are glad shat the Democratic Senators filibustered to prevent the oatrage. — Senator CARMACK of Tennessee bad plenty of fan with the subsidy mongers of the Senate last Sunday and be was perform- ing a valuable publio service while be was enjoying himself. By the eame token it is a great pisy that CARMACK'S splendid services in the Senate are to end with his great parliamentary achievement in defeat ing the atrocious ship subsidy. RR Harviman and Roosevelt. From the Bloomsburg Democratic Sentinel. Mr. Harriman is of the opinion that President Roosevelt is wanting in mental discipline. The President is a ‘‘very able man,” this wizzard of frenzied finance de- clares, and might be ‘‘capable of doing great things,” if he only more ‘fixity of purpose.’’ The subject that brought these observa out was a recent event in the Panama canal affair. It begins to look as if that great work will never make progress as long as the President has control of it. He is constantly obanging either the or the personnel of those in charge and Mr. Harriman can’t Imagine asunoccess of a great enterprise under such circumstances. The average thinking man is not likely to be influenced eisher in his likes or dis- likes by the opinions of Mr. Harriman. A writer in one of the daily papers is not far wrong in his conclusions that Mr. Harri- man’s story of his juggling tions with the stocks of the Alton, the Illinois Central and the Union Pacific railroads sxprend a more dangerous form of immorality than that of several witnesses in the Thaw trial. Such a man can have little influence on a wholesome public mind. But what he says to Roosevelt is literally true. His frequent changes of plans and purposes prove him ntuple of managing important under- takings. Rocsevelt lacks in steadfastness if not in common honesty. His open traffic in pub- lic patronage in order to prevent an inves- tigation of the Post-office department just after he bad enjoyed extensive and expen- sive favors from railroads which had been overs ng the government for services was 8 ious if not criminating and his want of veracity as revealed on several co- casions are corroborative of hie lack of moral stamina. But Harriman is a poor oritic of morals or mental qualities. By his own confession he is a pirate who nei- ther respects nor conserves the property of anybody. The Higher Law and the Thaw Jary. From the Connellsville Courier. The newspaper jury, which tries Thaw and convicts or acquits him from day to day, and every day, bas now discovered that the District Attorney bas bim ina corner between the mad house and the electric chair, this by reason of she alleged admiesion of an alienist for the defease that Thaw had his wits about him when he killed White, the admission being that Thaw was sufficiently sane to know the deadly character of the revolver he bought and whioh he carried when he fired the fatal shot. Alieniss testimony is largely theoretical and hypothetical, and Doctor Buiitian’s cross-examination was almost entirely so. He did not see Harry Thaw at the time of the shooting, nor immediately before or after, and has no knowledge of his mental condition at that particular time save throogh the testimony of others. The chief use of alienist testimony is to furnish a legal excuse for modifying the stern universality of the law to fit exce tional cases. There ie no Higher Law in fue State of New York, but there are alien- While the jurors are sworn to try the case “‘in accordance with the law and the evidence,’ it has been decided in Pennsyl- vania at least that ‘‘the jurors are judges of the law as well as the facts.” In other words, the jurors may disregard the law laid down by coetom or even statute in the higher object of meeting out justice as it appears to them. They area law unto themselves. Their verdict of acquittal in a murder case may not be set aside. While the Higher Law will not be recog- nized by the bench, there are indications that it has sunk deeply into the minds and hearts of the Thaw jurymen, and the more heartlessly Jerome harrasaes the prisoner's wile the more firmly it will remain fixed ere. Prosperity. From the Chicago Public. at there is much prosperity no one can Wo The enormous expenditures of the luxurious rich testify to it in unmistakable terms. Bat whose is the prosperity ? Are they prosperous whose labor furnishes the wherewithall for these lavish expendisares? Wealth does not fall from the stars, nor is it lefs over from the past. It is recreated day by day. Consequently, when one man spends a t that he doesn’t create, others must create a thousand that they cannot spend. The r the expendi- tares of the idle, therefore, the greater mast be the impoverishment of producers. Toe is i 20 there is 5 gaineay. ng it. Prosperity for idle parasites Is adversity for industrious workers. pe For Trial Divorce. From the New York Tribune. The minister and his wife who recently separated for a period of three years, mean- ing to seek a divorce if after lapse time they were so minded, have introduced a bappy idea. Instead of the trial mar- Siage, Why Hob Jus shal Qivorcey Three years ¢ enable an uncongen r to decide whether divorce is the realm pa Sesion le spam oitiiogs wishing to enter Is Not, But Ought to Be. From the Connellsville Courier. The Johnstown Democrat denon! crime the su, on of news of rail disasters. It isn’t a crime, yet; but it's a question whether it ought not to be made one by legislative enactment. Rail reg- ulation is in danger of running , but railway officials owe something of and accommodation to the public, even they don’t to the newspapers. Want the Women to Vote. From the Perry County Advocate, Some time ago Grover Cleveland was at odds with the but now he is “almost persuaded.” He can’t blink the fact that a lot of ignoramuses in tronsers march ap to the polls and the farther fact that the country is fall of sensible women who bave as much at stake in government Spawls from the Keystone, —Allentown young women raised $6,555 in one week toward a free public library. =D. C. Crags. a plasterer, of Warren, has received word that he is a beneficiary under the will of an old friend in Arkansas, and will likely receive a fortune of $75,000. . —8. F. McCloskey, an aged citizen of Cur. wensville, Clearfield county, died Thursday of last week. His wife died the Tuesday previous. Fora number of years he acted as county surveyor. —Thirty Indian boys and girls arrived at the Carlisle Indian school last week, all Northern Cheyennes from the Tonque river agency, Montana. —Homer Hetrick, aged 17, was burned to death, and James Ohein, aged 18, was seri- ously burned in a fire which broke outin a saw mill at Camp Run, near DuBois, shortly after midnight last Tuesday night. They were both residents of Emerickville. It is understood the fire started from an explo- sion of powder. —The store room of Whitman, Schwarz & Co., at Lewistown, was burglarized Friday night. The safe was rifled and while no money was secured by the thieves valuable papers were taken out. The most of these were found floating about in pools of water, Saturday morning, among them being orders on the county amounting to about $1,000. —The prison officials of Luzerne county have been charging the city of Wilkesbarre 45 cents a day for boarding city prisoners, and have been feeding them on choice meats, including turkey occasionally. Mayor Kir- kendall and City Attorney McHugh have protested against these prices, and say they will no longer pay for such chdice boarding. —The officials last Thursday issued their call for the eighteenth annual convention of District No. 2, United Mine Workers of America, to be held at DuBois, and set March 21st as the date for the opening of the same. Over 300 delegates are expected to be present. A number of matters will receive attention but the principal one will be the fixing of a wage scale to govern the mining of coal for the year beginning April 1st. —With his throat cut from ear to ear as if by a razor, C. E. Keys, a Pennsylvania rail~ road fireman, was recently taken to the Columbia hospital. While Keys was riding in the eabin the bursting of the air hose caused the train to stop suddenly and the jar forced his head through one of the win- dows. The broken glass cut a deep gash in Keys’ throat, almost severed the windpipe and just grazed the jugular vein. The wound is a serious one. —Henry M. Kuester, a well known in- surance agent of Williamsport, was found dead in bed at the home of his mother in Viaduct, Clearfield county, Saturday morn- ing. With his wife he had gone there on a visit, having complained of ill health. He retired about 11 o'clock Friday night, and the next morning when a member of the household went to waken him he was found dead. He was 43 years old and leaves a widow and three daughters. —In May, 1905, James B. Miller was mur- dered at Rainsburg, Bedford county, and Henry Rose, who was charged with the crime, was convicted of murder in the first degree at the September term of court in 1906. Last Wednesday the motion for a new trial was granted and this being done the court accepted a plea of guilty of murder in the second degree and the defendant was sentenced to twenty years in the western penitentiary. He was also given ten years for the forgery of Millers’ name to a note. —With the death of Victor Weldon, a stove maker at Laquin, Lycoming county, there is added another chapter in a sad story. Wel- don, who was about 38 years of age, moved to Laquin two years ago. A few months later a 4 year old daughter of the household was burned to death, her clothing catching fire from a bonfire. Shortly after that the baby of the family died. Ten days later Mrs. Weldon died, leaving her husband and two young daughters. The death of Mr. Weldon leaves two children. They will probably be sent to relatives in Michigan. —The section foremen of the Lewisburg and Tyrone railroad witnessed an unusual sight one cold morning last week. He was riding « railroad tricycle and when a few miles from Lewisburg saw an animal of some kind on the track. On getting closer he found 1t to be a grey fox with one foot frozen fast to the rail and unable to tear the mem- ber loose. The animal was dispatched by the foreman, who hit it with a stone. The fox had crossed the creek near the railroad and when the wet paw struck the cold steel the animal could not release the hold. —The Round Table conference of super- intendents and principals of Central Penn. sylvania will meet in Clearfield Friday and Saturday, March 15th and 16th. The first session will be beld on Friday eveningat 8 o'clock in the assembly room of the High school building. The question, “What Should Be the Aims of the High School will be opened by Singleton Bell Esq., presi. dent of Clearfield borough school board, fol- lowed by Prof. George D. Robb, principal of Altoona High school, after which the con- ference will engage in a round table discus- sion. Two sessions will be held on Saturday, at esch of which pertinent school questions of | will be discussed. Directors, superintend- ents, principals, teachers and the public in general are cordially invited. —One of the biggest merges in the history of bituminous coal mining in Pennsylvania has been effected in Cambria county accord- idg to papers filed at Ebensburg recently, in which thousands of acres of coal and mineral rights in that and Clearfield county, former- ly owned by the Beech Creek Coal Mining company are conveyed to the Pennsylvania Way Coal and Coke company. The leasesgives control for 909 years from Septenfber 1st 1906, of sll properties to the Pgunsylvania, Beech Creek and Eastern Coal and Coke company, which will be the name merged concern. The transaction gives to the operating company control of over 1,000 coal cars, 937 coke ovens and 39 mining operations with 33 shipping points. Three million dollars worth of bonds are issued, the proceeds of which are to be used in develop- ing to the fullest extent the recently ac— quired properties. Under the merger the new concern will have control of 106,000 acres of land. The president of the merger. ed concern is Hon. James Kerr, of Clear- as the men.