BY P. GRAY MEEK. EE ——————————————————————— : Ink Slings. —It was a very short summer we bad. ~The household motto these days is : Clean up. —Chicago bas gone Republican. Not so much Republican as anti-HEArsT. —SANDERSON certainly didn’t give those capitol clocks to the State on ‘“‘tick.”’ ~-Centre Hall seems determined to hold her position in the centre of the stage of excitement. ~—We are waiting to see what position the Hon (?) SAM SALTER gets under the new deal in Philadelphia. —They are serving rotten meat to the workmen on the Panama canal. Can it be possible! And poor old uncle RusseLL ALGER is sleeping "neath the sod. —The Jamestown exposition police are to be called the POWHATAN guards and there will probably be a PoconoxTAs and a JoHN SMITH for every POWHATAN. ~ ‘Tod COOPER failed in his attempt to put the Legislative Record out of busivess. More's the pity. Both the Record and Tox bad better look ous for Dr. OSLER. ~—PENNYPACKER seems anxious to testi. fy before the capitol probes, but if the old dummy didn’t know what was going on at the time what can he have to tell about now ? —A German professor declares that the numerous sun spots have put the earth in a very restless condition. Buck-wheat cakes or strawberries have the same effect on most mortals. —The Braddock miner who ate fifty eggs in two and one-balt minutes on Monday must have felt like an omelette or decided- ly scrambled for a few days following his gastronomical feat. —Judged from what the President says he wrote to Mr. HARRIMAN and what Mr. HARRIMAN says he received from the President the letters must bave been open- ed and changed en route. ~The girl who doesn’t have one of those dear little sugar loaf hats these days must have abont as many seoret spasms of cov- etousness as the Bellefonte physician who doesn’t have an antomobile. —It PENROSE can do it the McCorp bill, which legalizes the election of United States Senators by popular vote, will be killed. The Boss don’t want to put his chance of re-election up to the people. —It didn’t take a financier to get rich farnishing the capitol at Harrisburg when all that bad to be done was bhny desks at forty dollars each and charge the State eight hundred and sixty-four for them. ~—According to the President E. H. HAR- RIMAN is not only a rascal but a modern ANANIAS. We presume that the Presi. dent is still of the opinion that Mrs. Ber. LAMY STORER is the Mrs. ANANTAS of the present. —8Secretary CORTELYOU knows his hus- iness perhaps, but it is very fanny finan- ciering that makes our government issue fifty million in new bonds when there are two bundred and fifty million dollars lying idle in the treasury. —President ROOSEVELT has discovered a diabolical plot to rob him of the presiden- tial electors of Pennsylvania and Ohio, and he is correspondingly hot under the collar. The sarprise in this to the public lies in the fact that everyone thonght RoosEVELT wasn’t after a third term. —It is very probable that the fellows who are snggesting now that BERRY should be elected Governor as an acknowledge- ment of his great service to the State will have forgotten BERRY entirely by the time another gubernatorial election comes around. Such is the fleeting memory of gratitude. —Mayor REYBURN, who has just suc- ceeded Mayor WEAVER, of Philadelphia, has installed all of the gang in office again despite the pre-election promise of an hon- est administration. The gang and honesty are so incompatible that we fear Philadel- phia is to have another of the Say Asm BRIDGE administrations. —Everybody is filled with righteous in- digoation at the way our State was robbed in building the new capitol, but we have not heard a single expression as to whet we are going to do about it. It is all right to discover and expose the thieves, but if we can’t get the money back would we not bave been happier bad we known nothing abont it. —BooKER T. WASHINGTON'S latest bit of advice to his race runs like this : *‘Don’s be taking five dollar buggy rides on six dollars a week ; don’t put a five dollar hat on a five cent head.”” We stop right here to listen to the chorans of Amens! to the latter admonition. There wonld be lots of them in Bellefonte had their husbands the sand to express themselves, —A Chicago bank has discharged a olerk because he got married on a salary of Jess than a thousand dollars a year. The ac- tion is just about the same as deciding that under such conditions there is nothing left for the young man to do but steal. Apd in the face of all this wisdom we are ready to bet that the wealth that founded that very bank came originally from men who bad married on far less than a thousand a year. Roosevelt and Harriman. If any man in the public life of the conn- try bas ever been pilloried as a hypocrite and a fraud, that wan is THEODORE RoosSE- VELT. Ina letter written by Epwarp H. HARRIMAN to BSIDNEY WEBSTER the sinister relationship between ROOSEVELT and the Wall street pirates is fully reveal- ed. “My being made at all prominent in the political situation,” writes Mr. HaRr- RIMAN, “is entirely due to President ROOSEVELT and because of my taking an active part in the autumn of 1904 at his urgent request and his taking ad vantage of | conditions then created to further his own | interests. About a week before the elec- tion in the autumn of 1904,” Mr. HARRI- MAN, continues, ‘‘when it looked certain that the State would go Democratic and was dounbtful as to ROOSEVELT himeell, he, the President, sent me a request to go to Washington and confer upon the political conditions in New York State. I complied and be told me he understood the cam- paign could not be successfully carried on without sufficient money and asked if I would help them in raising the necessary funds, as the national committee, under the control of Chairman CorTELYOU, had utterly failed of obtaining them.” Of course Mr. HARRIMAN consented to perform this sinister service. Men who are contemplating burglary are always obliging to the officers of the law and HARRIMAN wanted to putthe President under obligations to him. The unpopular- ity of Senator DEPEW stood in the way somewhat but the President promised to get him out of the way by appointing him Ambassador to France, so that HARRIMAN undertook the work at once. He subscribed $50,000 himself and got others to contrib- ute to the full amouns. ‘‘The checks were given to treasurer BLIss, who took them to Chairman CORTELYOU," continues Mr. HARRIMAN. “If there were any amorg them of life insuravce companies, or other like organizations of coarse CORTELYOU must bave informed the President.” The irony in that expression is worth its weight in gold. It is inferentially au accusation that the President was cognizant of the looting of the insurance companies and ap- proved it. He is pot so particular about moralities where his own interests are in- volved as they were when he found his po- litical ambitions in jeopardy. There was on stench to the tainted money which was used to promote his election. Ol course President ROOSEVELT denies this statement of facts. He had no alterna- tive except to resign the great office which he has covered with shame. But he has not hesitated to falsify in other instances when such a course seemed necessary and it would be surprising if he should not do so in the present exigency when the necessity ie greater than ever before. The chances are that he will coerce others into corrob- orating his statement, moreover. The Presideat has a vast power over the busi- ness interests of the country and will not hesitate to exercise it to the full measure of his possibilities to discredit Mr. HARRI- MAN. But the story is too well supported by circumstantial evidence and probability to be disposed of in that way. There are too many known incidents embodied in the narrative to be blown out of sight by a breath. A man who is constantly denying and never proves his contention can’t con- viet others who enjoy reputations for verac- ity by a simple denial. That is what ROOSEVELT has attempted to do in a dozen cases and if he bhasn’t already exhausted the patience of the public it is inexbausti- ble. Some Wholesome Truths. Senator Jorn E.Fox,of Dauphin county, gave his associates in that body some inter- esting truths, the other day, with respect to the State Highway Department. Sen- ator FOX is a stalwart Republican and an adberent of the organization. But he is a distinguished lawyer and a carefal ob- server of events and baving ascertained the delinguencies of the Highway Depart- ment he had the conscience and courage to denounce it. It is rotten to the core aud Senator Fox frankly declared that in his judgment there should be a complete reorganization of the Department before any more money is appropriated for its use. This State needs good roads more than most things. The prosperity of the farmer depends largely on the condition of the highways over which he carries his prod- ucts to market. The consumers of the products of the soil are equally concerned in the construction and maintenance of good roads. But both the producer and consumer can better afford to sacrifice the advantages of improvements than they can to have the public life of the Common- wealth polluted by the presence of such an iniquity as the Highway Department has been from the very beginning. It was oreated for political uses and has never served any other purpose. While Senator Fox was literally acourate in his protest against the present Highway Department go far as he went, he didn’t go the full length in the matter. He ought ST to have said that the plan upon which the present Highway Department is predicated is fundamentally wrong. It subverts one of the vital principles of ovr government for it destroys home rule. The Highway Department intervenes between the people ofa community and their local affairs which would he a dangerous thing even if it« work were well and economically per- formed instead of being badly and profli- gately done. The Senator ought to take another fall ont of the iniquity. Hunting for a Scape Goat. Thas tbe conspirators in the capitol grafting operations have determined to find a scape goat is practically certain. Archi- tect HUSTON, in a recent interview, put the responsibility on Governor PENNY. PACKER while former Superintendent of Public Grounds and Buildings SHUMAKER, with equal postiveness lays the blame on Huston. He was the Machiavelian, Mr. SHUMAKER declares, who ‘‘pulled the wool’’ over PENNYPACKER'S eyes and made that ‘‘bugologist” like a chunk of soft putty in the hands of the gang. Pre- sumably some of the others will give their interpretations of the matter, later on. PENNYPACKER has declived to makea reply to Huston, already, but he may think better of it when he discovers that it is necessary to ‘‘save his own bacon.” Meantime the aggregate of graft is grow- ing to prodigious proportions though noth- ing bas been revealed to indicate what be- came of the money. It has been observed that SANDERSON is a very rich man now, whereas before the event he was only moderately well off. But nobody imag- ines that he got all the rake-off. It isan inflexible rule of such men that partici- pants in grafting operations shall ‘‘under- stand addition, division and silence.” HusTox's fees amounted to upwards of balf a million dollars and the chances are that he would bave to be satisfied with that sani. CasseLrn, who furnished the metal cases, did tolerably well but was hardly allowed more than a million of ‘‘velvet.”” Assuming that SANDERSON, CasseLL and HustoN divided three mil- lions, what became of the rest? The default of the Enterprise National bank of Allegheny entailed an extraordi- nary demand for funds on the machine but Treasurer BERRY states that he can discov- er no sign that the rake-off was used for the purpose of meeting this exigency. That being trae the inference is plain that some- body, other than those named, must have participated in the loot. Nobody suspested until the fact was brouzht out in a judicial inquiry that DURHAM was getting a slice of the enormous profits on the contracts for the Philadelphia filter plant. Yet it ie now an established and even an admis- ted fact and why might there not have been some such silent partner or partners in the capitol graft. The alternative is to assume that PENNYPACKER got a share. Harriman Has the Best of it. The assertion of HARRIMAN and the de- nial of Roosevelt creates a question of ve- racity which can’t be decided off-hand, as the President observed with respect to another matter, the other day. There used to be a tradition that ‘‘the King can do uo wrong’ and a popular belief that the President of the United States can’t tell a lie. But both these notions have been radely bumped lately aod so far as the President is concerned the reverse is begin- ning to be the popular idea. A couple of years ago a distinguished oit- izen of Massachusetts reported a conversa- tion with the President which RoosevELT subsequently denied most vehemently. Thereupon half a dozen others present at the time corroborated the statement of the gentleman from the Bay State and the country was bumilated because the Presi- dent was proved a falsifier. A year ago ROOSEVELT denounced Senators TILLMAN and BAILEY as liars because of an assertion of theirs and they proved their point by eubstantial oral and doonmentary evidence. Later the President ungallantly charged Mrs. BELLAMY STORER with falsification and that accomplished woman proved that the lie had come from him. Under the circumstances, therefore, there is no presumption of veracity on either side and theactual facts must determine. ROOSEVELT admits most of the assertions of HARRIMAN and proves the others. For example, the intimacy betweeh them in 1904 is revealed in the President’s letters while a letter which he himsel? has given to the public shows that a few weeks be- fore the election of that year, ROOSEVELT promised to consult HARRIMAN about cer- tain features of his message. The infer- ence is plain and no fair-minded man will hesitate to decide the question of veracity in favor of HARRIMAN. ——On Mouday, April first, the Ameri- can Lime and Stone company increased the wages of its laboring men, those who are not on contract work, from $1.40 to $1.50 per day. The inorease was entirely vol- untary on the part of the company, henoe the more appreciated by the men benefitted. ATE RIGHTS AND F BELLEFONTE, PA., APRIL EDERAL UNI Roosevelt and Foraker. President ROOSEVELT has ‘‘declared iwar’’ on Senator FORAKER, of Ohio. The Senator was indiscreet enough, a few days ago, to offer the opportunity,and the Presi- dent has availed himself of it. The chauces are that the result will be disastrous to FoRAKER. It can bardly be said that this is entirely regretable. FORAKER is not the sort of a man aboat whom popular inter- est centres. He is selfish, secretive and in triumph far from magnanimous. In fact it may be said that the nearest he has ap- proached to being right since the beginning of his public career, is in his opposition to the President. That expresses a protest against usurpation of authority and the arrogance of office which is ominous of evil. Bat FORAKER has little chance of suc- cess in a fight with the President. There is not now in the public life in the country, and probably never has been, a man as adroit in political chicanery as RooseverLT, and few as consoienceless. He is restrain- ed by neither law nor fear. A few years ago in this State when QUAY was in politio- al! danger ROOSEVELT openly allowed him to use the patronage of the government to buy votes in the convention which nomi- nated PENNYPACKER. When a congres- sional investigation was threatened into the affairs of the Postoffice Department, Roosg- VELT appeared in the lobby trading offices for votes against the proposition because the investigation would have revealed that the expenses of his junket were paid by overcharges for carrying mails, When FORAKER goes up against such an antagonist he will learn political tricks that he never dreamed of before. Under other circumstances the elimination of FOoRAKER would be a sabjeot for popular felicitation. It would indicate the removal of a pestiferous partisan whose highest am- bition is personal trinmph and whose best impulses are influenced by bigotry. Bat when his defeat involves the trinmph of a more dangerous man, it eannot be contem- plated with complacency. On the contrary it then becomes a subject of grave concern. There is some reason for hope in the fact that Secretary TAFT rather than Roosg- VELT will be the beneficiary of the battle. But when TAFT lends himself to the sin- ister schemes of ROOSEVELT one can't be sure of him. Roosevelt and Wall Street. The President has practically determin- ed,according to the Washington dispatches, to keep his hands and his mouth out of the Wall street muddle. It will be remember- ed that the railroad magnates have recent- ly undergone a great change of mind with respect to federal regulation of railroads. For a couple of years they had been fight- ing the proposition with considerable vehe- mence and a lot of assiduity. The reason of it was, no doubt, that the States, the only authority which has a legal right to regulate, showed little inclination to assert their power and were giving the roads free rein. Under such circumstances the idea of federal regulation was obnoxious to the maguates, A year ago things took a turn. Ohio led the way by passing a two-cent a miie pas- senger rate, aud Indiana and several other States followed. The railroad magnates didn’t seem to mind, however, until Penn- sylvania and New York took the matter up and then it occnrred to them that they would better have congressional legislation than the more drastic state legislation. Meantime an investigation into the meth- ods of the magnates revealed such a rotten condition of affairs that owners of the shares loss confidence and a slamp ensued. To check this the pirates appealed to the Presi- dent to do something that would restore confidence. They knew that he couldn't do anything but the promise would proba- bly delay the State action aud give them time to think. The President has practically decided nos to intervene, however. He proposes to let the frenzied financiers bear the conse- quences of their own immoralities. He is wise in this. He couldn’s do anything, anyway, and what was the use in inviting the humiliation which inevitable failure must have entailed ? So he says he will let Wall street take care of itself. He doesn’t love Wall street very well, he intimates, and probably be is right. Bat as a matter of fact he is more responsible for the dis- trust of Wall street than he would like to admis. If he had interfered less with other people’s affairs before there would be less need for interference now. ——The Lock Haven Democrat on Sat- urday came out in a new dress, just in time to celebrate Easter, and now looks as spic and span as a girl of sweet sixteen. The Democrat is a good paper, oue that the peo- ple of Lock Haven should appreciate fully, and it’s always a welcome exchange on our table. ——Sunday was not one of the moss auspicious days for a display of fine feath- ers and Easter hats, and yet some Belle- 9, 1909. . fonte women were brave enough to defy the weather and appear in gaudy attire. A What Is Being Shown up at Hare risburg. The Purpose of the Press Muzzler and the Real Pennypacker Graft in everything and everywhere. The benefits of Berry's Election. The Quay Statue Ete. (Special Correspondence.) Harrisburg, Pa., April 4, 1907. In the disclosures of graft made by the capitol investigating committee, the source of the ‘‘press muzzler” is easily traced. That Peunypacker wanted to silence the press in order to shield himself can hardly be doubted, for his responsibility for, if not his culpability i, the crimes of the conspi- rators has been clearly revealed. The in- fluencing reason for the prodigious and long continued venality in the official life of Russia is the absolute impotence of the press. Courageous, capable and independ- ent journalism is a perfect security againet corruption in public life. When the con- spiracy which looted the treasury of Penn- sylvania was in the process of formation the greatest fear of those concerned was the newspapers. Pennypacker undertook to re- move this danger by muzzling the press. The failure of bis purpose has resulted in the exposure of the crimes. If the press. could bave been silenced William H. Berry would not have been elected State Treasur- erand in the absence of that result the grafting operations would #till be in pro- gress and the machine, entrenched in power in uninterrupted control of the official life of the Commonwealth. A good many of our esteemed newspapers delude themselves or deceive their patrons by declaring that Pennypacker was honest but an innocent viotim of the wen about him. In the greatest of his novels the late Charles Dickens created a charac- ter, the helpless victim of vicious and de- signing associates, who, these journals would incarnate in the person of Penny- ker. But Pennypacker is no more like r. Strong than Architect Huston resem- bles Uriah Heap. He is weak becanse of an extraordinary vanity bot not on ao- count of a confiding nature. On the con- trary there is no more canning or resource- ful figure in the public life of the Common. wealth at present as there has been none in the past. When the exposure of gral was first made the other conspirators, overwhelmed with consternation, ‘‘stam- peded But not so with Pennypacker. He aced the accusation with a positive denial usd ade the failronda accessaries Jo the crime by organizing the penny-a-mile ex- cursions to fool the public by he splendor of the “Palace of Graft.” thousands who availed themselves of that opportunity to deceive their own eyes cooldn’t tell whether the glass in the e was made in Reais ox Seaver county. Not one in a 0 of the most in people can tell by carsory inspeol edifference between veneered white pine polished ma- hogavy. Pennypacker knew thie and work- ed his understanding overtime. If the fraud could have been revealed the ont- raged public conscience would have ecourged the conspirators and obliterated their party. Bat it wasn’t and counldn’t be and Pennypacker’s genius for deception carried the Republican party to victory in the face of the most colossal frauds of modern history, AMAZING EVIDENCE OF GRAFT. As the Jvantigation of the capitol graft proceeds the evidence becomes more amaz- ing. Last week several new sensations were brought out. The brother-in-law of the favored contractor, Sanderson, testified that Architect Huston knew that Beaver county glass had been substituted for bace- arab glass. The specifications required bacarat glass and the bills rendered were for bacarat glass. Bat the material furnished was Beaver county glass and the fraud was perpetrated with the knowledge and assent of Huston. The State was robbed of a vast sam by the transaction and the contractor proportionately enriched. Yet Penny pack- er protests that there was no frand and Huston declares that there was no collusion. yey must imagine that the people are all vols. That there was collusion between the contractors and the architect is made clear, moreover, by the relations shown between Sanderson and Payne. Payne didn’t get as large a percentage of profits as Sanderson, but his rakeoff was very great. For exam- ple he got fifteen cents s fool for the ce- ment floors while the evidence shows that he paid only five cents a foot for them. In his case, however, the culpability is not so much in the overcharges. It is in the fact that ke was cognizacs of and a participant in the vast overcharges of Sanderson. Asa matter of fact in some particulars at least, Payne was the agent for Sanderson and in all cases he exercised a supervisory power over the employees of Sanderson. That re- lationship occuld hardly have been in the absence of a partnership. GRAFT IN SMALL MATTERS. The testimony taken at the last session of the commission was more amusing than serious. That is it treated of the trifles about the boilding. But it proved that the spirit of graft run through the tion from beginning to end. The boot. black’s stand in the Senate cloak room, for instance, cost Sanderson $125.00 and the State was $1,619.20, the profis being at the rate of 1195 per cent. On the barber's case the poor fellow was only able to make 902 per cent., which indicates a bard-hearted sub contractor. The clothes trees and umbrella stands yielded profits of a fraction less than 500 per cens., which could be regarded in no other light than down-right cruelty if it were nos for the fact that Sandssson had no money invested at all and the profit was on air. The same is true of the vast profitson the ohande- Fers. Erother-in-law Salom testified that not a cent of money had been by . body for the stock of the vania Bronze Ce., which sapplied the chandeliers 5 the i posi and the shareholders dividends amounting in the Sggregate to 1 pete, on an investment ate- y nothing. But the startling feature of all this is that if William H. Berry bad not been eleoted State Treasurer in 1905 the public would never have known of this colossal fraud. It was the intention of oconspira- 89% | tors of the three local breweries got Spawls from the Keystone. —There were 446 liquor licenses issued in Barks county, and the license fees amounted to over $150,000, —Mary Champluvier, a waitress employed at the Parker House in Tunkhannock, Wy- oming county, has fallen heir to an estate of from $75,000 to $100,000 left her by an uncle who recently died in France. —Two swans were recently shot and killed near Westover, Clearfield county, and hearing of this Game Warden Rishel imme- diately got busy and had the men who killed the birds arrested and fined. Ten dollars was paid for cach bird. —The discovery was made lact Saturday morning at the residence of Joseph Selinger, at Salladasburg, Lycoming county, that dur. ing the night a thief had effected an en- trance and got away with $400 in cash which was taken from a tin box which had been placed in a bureau drawer. —The old car shops at Huntingdon were put in operation on April first by the Pitts- burg industrial Iron Works company, a new company which recently became the owner of the property. Itis understood that about 150 men have been given employment and these are mostly skilled mechanics. ~—Options in the sum of $50,000 on lands in Juniata and Penn townships, Huntingdon county, have been taken up by Messrs. J. RB. and W. Simpson for the Raystown Water Power company. A gang of men has been at work for some days past putting down test holes to get a location for the first dam. —The last legislature having failed to make provision for the payment of any fees to health registrars for their services under an act passed by that body, the health reg- istrars of Schuylkill county have decided to apply to the present legislature to provide for the payment of salaries or fees now long overdue. —Samuel Shellenberger, a young plumber, of York, was terribly burned on Sunday morning in a club house on Diamond island, in the Susquehanna river, by an explosion of gasoline while he was trying to start a fire in a gasoline stove. Only by the prompt action of two friends, who smothered the flames, was his life saved. —A short time before Easter the Ladies’ Aid society of the Lock Haven hospital made a request for contributions in the shape of eggs for that institution, the same to be in the shape of an Easter gift. The response was most generous and on Saturday it was announced that a total of 2,200 eggs, or 183} dozen, had been contributed. —On Saturday Charles M. Newton, a gro- cer, of Jackson Run, Warren county, came into possession of a one dollar bill which told a story of the disastrous slump in Wall street, as these words were written across the back of it: ‘The last of $17,600 lost in Wall street in Union Pacific, Reading, St. Paul, Northern Pacific and a few others.” —Miss Sallie Rambo, who for many years lived the life of a recluse at Swedesburg, Montgomery county, died recently at the ad vanced age of 98 years. On Wednesday while making an appraisement of her effects hier friends were surprised by finding in the dark recess of a closet a moldy package, in’ which there was a roll of $1,400 in bank notes. : pe Lc —On Saturday Judge Bell, of Blair county, granted ninety-five licenses, refused seven and held six over for further consideration. He also notified the landlords in Altoona and Hollidaysburg that they would have to close their bars and sell no drinks after elev- en o'clock and at all other hotels in the county the bars must close tight at ten o'clock. —Taking a ladder from a nearby yard a thief raised it to one of the upper windows of the residence of J. P. Stevenson, consult- ing engineer of the Standard Steel works, at Lewistown, got inside and proceeded to ran- sack the rooms. When be left he took with him two gold watches, a scarf pin, three rings set with diamonds and two purses con- taining small sums of money. —There resides in Greenfield township, Blair county, a family in which five genera- tions are domiciled under the one roof. The head of the house is Frederick Dively. and with him live bis grandmother, Mrs. Barba. ra Lingenfelter, his mother, Mrs. Rachel Dively, a married daughter, with several small children. The ages of this group run from 93 years down to less than one year. —W. F. Jacoby has disposed of his coal in. terests at Smoke Run and McCartney to Clark Bros.,, Coal Mining company. They have four operations, Falcon, Nos. 1, 2,3, and 4, two at McCartney and two at Smoke Run. The daily capacity of these operations is about 800 tons and 350 miners are given steady employment. E. C. Howe succeeds Mr. Miller in the office work at Smoke Run. —George R. Miller, of Spring Creek, War- ren county, awoke on Thursday morning at 1 o'clock and glancing into the room of his son Charley, aged 18 years, he noticed the bed was vacant. Knowing the boy is a sleep walker, the father arose to look for him and finally found him in the horse stable, partly dressed, and engaged in harnessing the horses to go to plow, having dreamed that he was to do that. —Tne champion egg eater of Fayette coun- ty is W. K. Knuckles, a miner, who ate 42 raw eggs at one sitting. In the store of W. E. Gans at Gans station, Knuckles was com- menting on his capacity for eggs and the merchant offered to provide the eggs. Knuckles had lined his interior with 42 of them when Gans pulled the basket away, declaring Knuckles would kill himself. Knuckles indignantly asserted he could eat two dozen more without hesitating. He has offered to bet that he can eat 100 eggs without stopping. —The breweries at Washington Pa., are all closed and the people are out of beer. The trouble is the result of a threatened strike by the brewery workers who belong to the Uni¢- ed Brewery Workers’ association. B the workmen had time to strike the proj and decided to close. The work: notified on Saturday when they wer that their services were no longer demanded, as the breweries would not open on Monday. Several days ago the brewery workers asked for an eight hour day and more pay; These demands the brewers say, they cangiot accede |Continued on 4th page. 1st column] to. 7