i 2 Z E x gE poco. ———This is the first day of Summer. —1If scientists keep on finding spots on | the sun they will leave us no sun at all, | nothing but spots. --Linn street is getting in fie shape for the next census, which is only three years off. And there is time for more. —The Minneapolis doctor who has de- clared that kissing must go should be io. formed that it does go, most everywhere. —Isn’t it human nature? The fellow who was kicking about it being =o cold last week now has his bammer out because it is 80 warm. ——The curfew whistle has not been blown since last Thursday evening but the policemen continue to chase the kids home at the usual time. —Governor CuaINS, of Towa, bas ex- plained that the ‘Iowa idea’ is to have Ro0sEVELT for President a third term, and TEDDY stands pat. —The new German Ambassador to this country is reported to be Baron Muy Vox ScHWARIZENSTEIN. The Mumm part of it sounds good enough so we will let it go at that. —A mad dog scare had Bishop street ex- cited a few days ago. Strange! We thought Bishop street beyond the stage of being aroused over such a little thing asa dog with the rabies. —The latest news from the peace con- ference at The Hague is to the effect that everyone is afraid to broach the subjects most desirable for discussion for fear of in- volving the envoys in a scrap. —Ambassador BRYCE told Chicagoans that their city bas no parallel in the modern world and Chicago isall happied up over it. It has never dawned on the Windy city how indefinite his remark was. —Mayor ScEMIDT, of San Fraucieco, bas proven such a rascally failure as to warn organized labor against throwing its sup- port to men who merely talk unions, and bave never been proven either honest or capable. —Mr. HustoN is away and his family does not know where he is. The gentleman has probably placed himself outside the jurisdiction of the courts of Pennsylvania, which seems to be the wisest act of his recent years. —It was too bad that HUSTON wasn't permitied to carry out that two million dollar bath room idea he bad for the cap- itol. It would bave come high but the State might have been better off for having cleaner Legislators, —Secretary TAFT'S son bas wou another prize at Yale and a contemporary observes that ‘‘all his ancestors were smart boys.” If indeed, it is true that they were all boys then this later Tarr, like Topsy, must have ‘‘just growed.” SOL. BELLEFONTE STATE R Frandulent Votes in Pennsylvania, The testimony taken in the election cases pow on trial in Schuylkill county is justly described as startling. It was proved on Monday that io the First ward of Shenan- doah forty-four frandulent votes were cast for the Republican ticket. Congressman Bru, who is prosecutor in the case, al- leges that a like proportion of frandulent votes were cast in thirty other election dis- tricts in the county. That is to say, in about one-fifth of the election districts in that county there were 1,320 fraudulent votes cast for the Republican ticket aud probably not lees thao 5,000 in the entire county. The total vote for BERRY and PrLuMMER outside of Philadelphia two years ago was 760,871. If the ratio of frandulent votes which Mr. BruMM, a Republican, alleges were polled in Schuyl- kill county last fall were cast in the other election districts in the State the Republi- can ticket was defeated by more than 100,- 000 instead of being elected by some 40,- 000 majority. There is no use in going behind the re- turns, however, and as STONE and PENNY- PACKER accepted elections achieved by fraud of which both bad guilty knowledge, it is bardly worth while to complain that STUART'S success was obtained in the same way though probably be bad nothing to do with the crimes. But we are justified in protesting against the continuance of this system of selecting the public officials of the Commonwealth. It is absolute folly to strive for honest government in the State while the officials who admiuister the government are chosen by fraud. How- ever free {rom the taint of personal dishon- esty an official chosen by fraud is necessa- 1ily the creature of those who bestowed upon him the questionable favor and they work him for their sinister purposes just as the machine used PENXYPACKER dur- ing the entire period of his official life. They didn’t divide the loot with him be- cause they didn’t have to. They owned him, body and soul. Of course Congressman BRUMM is not influenced by civic virtue to the prosecu- tion of these frauds, in whieh he is engaged. His object is to punish men in his own party who are persoually antagonistic to him and the piobable reason that he basn’g included all the districts in the county in his accusation is that in the others his friends were culpable. It is impolite, however, to ‘look a gilt horse in the mouth,” and we shall accept Mr. BRUMM's —Nobody accuses former treasurer MATHUES of wanting to steal anything from the State Treasury but his visit there wouldn't bave looked so crooked had he made it in bosiness hours, instead of wait- ing until the dead of night to ge: to look over the book: a chance — Lafayette conferred the degree ol doe- tor of laws on Governor EDWIN 5. BTUART on Wednesday. While the Governnr is not made any the wiser by the houorary de- gree it is certain that he is dignified and prudent enough to hear it with oredit to] Lafayette and himeell. —Japao is not to be érifled with noris she to be temporized with. If Japanese living in this country do not find things to s their liking let then go back te Japan. America is for Americans and not for tem. porary residents who come here to cke ont a fortune to be canied back and used in the fatherland. —It was only to be expected that the pew “burglar proof’ safe in the State Treasury has turned out to be not burglar proof at all. The gang that bought it and had it placed there is not the kind that wants the State’s funds too securely locked up. When an emergency arises they al- ways must feel that they have somewhere to go for funds. —The mayor of Camden might have invited the eailors from the Italian croieer Etraia, who left their boat to help fight a big fire in that city on Monday, to mind their own bosiness as did the delanct Gov- ernor SWETTENHAM, of Jamaica, to the American marines at the time of the earth. quake, but he didn’t. Therein lies the dif- ference between the mayor of an American city and the over-pompous Governor of an English Isle. —The Centre Democrat seems determined to find a *‘plot”’ in the movement to have the proposed PRUNER orphanage supersed- ed by a memorial hospital. In all candor we can see nothing back of the proposition farther than an honest difference of opin. ion as to whether an orphanage is needed at all in Bellefonte and as to whether a wing on the new hospital would not prove a more enduring memorial to Col. PRUNER than an institution with doubtial means of support and uncertain lines ol conduct. While we do pot question the motives of the Democrat in the matter we are of the opinion that its arguments would command more respect were they free from the in. sinuations that persons who differ with it are ipepired by motives not as high avd | work for what it is worth and it mav be { worth a great deal. Meantime itis well | enough to hold in mind the obwicus fact { that the Republican candidate for State | Treasurer isa machine Republican with | only a thin coat of reform veneer to dis | { guise him. If we would make the advan- | | tages obtained by the election of BERRY | | EWO years ago enduring it is necessary to | { kill the machine serpent and the clection BERRY calls a “polarized” Democrat this year will accowplisl: that 1 of what Mr. | resnit beyond even the shadow of a doubt. | An Esteemed but Mistaken Contem i porary. The estecraed Philadelphia Record is | justly severe in its criticism of the Legisla- e. Jt was a wratched admixture of i bypoorisy and iucompetence. There were | a few sincere and capable men occupying | seats ou the floor, nearly all in the Demo. | | cratic “‘cection,’’ for the streogth of the Demorcals in the body was too meagre to be called a ‘‘side.’” But the vast majority were gangsters striving constantly to pre- vent substantial reforms while pretending to be in favor of all kinds of reform. The esteemed Record is justified therefore, in declaring that ‘‘they voted money prodigal- ly for every purpose, good or bad, which was a complete abondonment of their du- ties.” Bat our Philadelpbia contemporary fails to lay the responsibility for this misuse of opportunities where it belongs. It adds to the sentence quoted, however, another manilestly appropriate observation. “They voted money,’ it declares, ‘‘because it would be popular and they refused to vote taxes because it would be unpopular.” As a matter of fact they voted money hecause the chairman of the House committee on Appropriations was a candidate for the Republican nomination for State Treasurer and his consent to profligacy iu appropria- tions made him so popular with his associ- ates in the Legislatare that PENROSE couldn't have beaten him if he wanted to, though he didn’t want to. The esteemed Philadelphia Record, prob- ably under orders from its Broad street contemporary and master, appears to be enamored of Mr. SHEATZ who, as the records show, was the most servile instru- ment of the PENROSE machine and re- creant public official who has filled the im- portant office of chairman of the commit- tee on appropriations in a dozen years, It has forfeited the respect of Democrats both for its intelligence and integrity and earn- ed a place among the mercenary newse papers which are controlled by the corpora- lofty as its own. tions in the interest of the Republican ma- chine. Mr. SHEATZ was responsible for the profligacy of the Legislature and the nomination is his reward. Mr. Mathues' Strange Action. Former State Treasarer WiLLiaM L. MATHUES was unfortunate in his explana- tion of his presence in the office of that de- partment of the government ou a certain midnight last week. He said first that he watchman, who held the same office dur- ing bis own administration and subsequent. work of clerk YoUxaG, from his time. Even il the statements were not conflicting they were nnconvine- ing. The night watchman would bave gladly gone to Mr. MATHUES' quarters in former chief, and it is not exaggerating to express the belief that Mr. YouxG would bave come to him with a sample of his work if the desire to see it bad heen inti- mated. There is a remote possibility that Mr. MATHUES may bave bad no worse motive in mind when he made his nocturnal ivva- gion of the Treasury than to refresh his memory concerning the business of the of- fice while he controlled it. But he could have enjoyed that privilege in broad day- light and in the ordinary way. No citizen of the State is refused information that is proper for him to acquire in that depart. ment, and certainly one who had quite re- cently been at the head of the department would not bave been discriminated against in that respect. Moreover an honest man acting under proper impulses and with a just purpose in mind would have preferred the obviously right method of acquiring the information he wanted, or needed, and that right method is to apply to the proper authorities daring business hours and in the regular aud only orderly way. It might be harsh to charge, even infer- entially, that Mr. MATHUES bad clandes- tively entered the office of the State Treas- arer at midnight tor the purpose of destroy- ing or mutilating the records in order to remove evidence of his own culpability. Mr. MATHUES ischarged with misfeasancein office and proof of his guilt wight cost him vast sums as well ae personal liberty. But security against such consequences of mis- conduct hardly justifies the adoption of the methods of a burglar, and that is what Mr. one employe of the department to let him into the office ut an imprope: time and either is oriminei if not burglarions Is affords ao additional reason, moreover, why a Democrat should be elested to one. ceed Mr. BERRY in the office cs quay iz Incaipated 1 — No thooghtial aan will be surprised thas | the evidence taken the capitol probers | has finally incalpated QUAY. Before the contracts were let, eeme, various notes of QUAY wera paid by the endorsers sad i% | is heliavad that they were reimbursed by | the favored contractors. This wae a favorite method of QUA v for acquiring money. Avy ouc or more notes for the bose, who never | were given plenty of time to meet the obli- gations. That is they were never pressed for payment unless they became obstiep- erous. The banks which held State de- posits were always obliging to ‘‘the old man.’ QuAY was a liberal borrower and had a peculiar way of getting accommodations. His dispatch to the cashier of the People’s bank of Philadelphia, was characteristic. “‘Boy a thousand shares of Met.,” he tele- graphed to the cashier in question, ‘on my account, and I will shake the plum tree.” He bad no money in the bank and buying ‘‘Met.,"” required cash. But shaking the plum tree produced ‘‘graft’’ and the baok was safe as a rule for QUAY never failed to keep such agreements. In the case in point there was a miscarriage of arrangements and the cashier committed suicide. If he bad held out the chances are that the fail ure might have been averted. As in the case of the Enterprise bank, of Allegheny, the cashier’s lack of nerve caused the col- lapse. In view of this new development it may be hoped that the purpose to erect a monu- went to the memory of QUAY in the cap: itol grounds at Harrisburg will be aban- doned. It is known that QUAY was the greatest corruptionist of hizday aud gen- eration. That of itself wouldn't deter those who contemplated the monument from carrying out their plans. But in the light of these new exposures they will bardly in. sult the conscience of the public by erect- ing an effigy which will bring the blush of shame to the face of every honest man who sees it. The release from this humiliation will not be complete recompense for the looting of the treasury, either, but it will be partial reparation for a great wrong. It will show that we are not willing to deify crime. 1GHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. PA. JUNE 21, 1907. wanted to pay his respects to the night | ly declared that he wanted to examine the | also a hold-over the hotel to receive the felicitations of his | MaTitves did. He either bribed or eajoled | auother to pernit an improper actiou, and | aspirant for favor was obliped to endorse | took the trouble to pay them nt maturity. ! It ic only just to say that the endorsers | The Bewlldered Johnstown Oracle. | We regret, far more than it is possible to ! express, that our esteemed contemporary, | the Jobustown Democrat,bas transferred its | allegiance from WILLIAM JENNINGS BRY- | AN to THEODORE ROOSEVELT. For years | our Johnstown contemporary bas been more { faithful to Mr. BRYAN than the proverbial | “needle to the pole,’’ and even now it car- | ries his banner at its masthead, whether he | consents to be a presidential candidate or | not. Much as we bave admired Mr. BRYAN | the fidelity of our Johnstown contem- poiary to his person avd policies has al- ways scemed to us most sublime. While | others hesitated it was always and iovari- ably eager for the fray in his bebalf. Bata change seems to bave come over the spirit of the BAILEY dream, rose-tinted as it al- ways bas been. For example, in a recent issue of our es- teemed contemporary, there appeared an editorial allusion to President ROOSEVELT'S recent Jawestown speech in which the gospel of paternalism was presented in its most advanced form, with the comment that ‘no candidate has done better in one speech to express his knowledge of the needs of the public and his desire to meet those needs.”” Mr. ROOSEVELT is prac- tically certain to be the candidate for Presi- dent in 1008 against Mr. BRYAN aud how will our Johnstown contemporary, in view of the language quoted, support Mr. BRY- AN against ove who hest expresses ‘‘the needs of the public and his desire to meet those needs ?'’ To be consistent our es- teemed contemporary will be compelled to support ROOSEVELT against BRYAN. In the history of the Republic there bas been no man in public life who represents so completely the antithesis of the fanda- meutal principles of the Democracy of Tuomas JEFFERsON than THEODORE RooseEVELT. It was the imperial notions of ALEXANDER HAMILTON that forced JEF- FERSON to the promulgation of the im- mortal doctrines which have since been the foundation of Democracy. But HAMILTON never dreamed of the centralization and other forms of imperialism which are the “apple of the eye’ of RoosEvELT., Our Johnstown contemporary may imagine that it can trifle with such heresies, but like the woth ot the candle it will get its wings ginged ultimately, bewildered with the consequence of its folly, it will land in the camp of the enemy. The Gnug's All Here. i wm {Two years age when the attempt of the Philadelphia machine to steal the gas plant of the city bal aroused public indiguation to the higobest piteh, there was a scurrying of the bauditti ‘for the tall timber.” JiIX { Mires, Harry RANSLEY, H. J. TRAINER, '1z DurxaM, Jin McNICHOL, { KLEMMER, DAVE LANE, J. J. SEED i 8, VARB, W. H. BERKELBACH, P. E. Cos | TELLO, JOHN B. LUKINS and others { drew from the lime light by i | from the city committee. The City party leaders were more than exultans over ti success in ‘‘purilying’’ the party. The bad i | i | T 1 ve AL. I there was ty io the claim. The bad men tad osctain- ly “‘side-stepped,’”’ or “‘dunoked.”’ The machine managers time that their retirement would be only for a brief period. They were simply tak. ing refuge temporarily in the eyclone cel- lar waiting an opportnuity to “bob upse renely,”” after ‘‘the clouds rolled by.’’ They understood the Philadelphia reformers. They bad correctly measured the cou- science which was ‘‘rampaging,”’ so to speak, in a fine frenzy. DAVE LANE stopped openly advising the office hold- ers to stuff ballot hoxes and Dur. HAM took himself out of the reach of court procesces. But they are are all back again. RANsSLEY and TRAINER and DUR- HAM and McNicHOL and LANEand “all the bunch’’ bave returned to the comnmit- tee. Literally it is ‘‘Hail, Hail, the Gang's All Here." Aud why shouldn't these political pirates resume control of the party which they have maintained for years by polluting the ballot and looting the people? The City party, the Committee of Seventy and all the other reform organizations have aban- doned the field and there is no resistance to the predatory operations of the plander- ers. Mr. SHEATZ has made merchandise of his reform pretensions and the others have deserted the field because they conldn’t negotiate themselves into office. It is the fit ending of a palpable farce and it is both natural and logical tbat the re- covery of power should be celebrated by the election of DAVE LANE, the only open advocate of ballot box stuffing, to command as chairman of the City committee. ~The members of the Mileshurg Hook and Ladder company are now busy rebears- ing for the presentation of that stirring western drama, ‘“The Honor of a Cowboy,’ in Boggs’ ball, Friday evening, June 23th. The proceeds will be for the benefit of the company and as the cause is a good one the boys should be well patronized. hoasted at the! a, W. i | wae . | campaign expenses ipeurred by prominent | "| machine lenders, and ti Ug | ly shat these bad been paid by the big Accessories Before tne Facts. From the Earnsburg Patriot, The ‘‘eminently respectable’ men and newspapers that are announcing that they Will voile for the election of John O. Sheatz, for State Treasurer, will not like to be told that they are among the most valuable al- lies of the Machine against which they sometimes fight and always talk, but such is the fact. Without the aid and comfort the Machine receives from them in emergencies like the present, it would bave been smashed aud pat ont of business finally long ago. They were aiders and abettors with the Gang in the capitol graft and morally ac- cessories before the fact. They rallied to the support of Samuel W. Pennypacker, the Machine candidate for Governor in 1902, just as they are coming to the support of Sheatz now. They would not have supported David Martin for Governor; they threw up their bats for Samuel W. Pennypacker but the Gaug could not bave got away with any more loot with Martin in the gubernatorial chair than it did under Pennypacker ; per- haps vot sa much, for Martin's administra- tion would have been mistrusted and more closely watched. They lauded Mr. Pennypacker as a great lawyer, an incorruptible judge, a sincere patriot just as they are now prais- ing Sheatz as a vigilant, honest and capa- ble business man. We all know what happened under Pennypacker, though the extent of the thefts bas not yet been fully revealed. With the nomination of Peunnypacker and his election, by the aid of those who have professed horror over the exposure of the Capitol graft, the Gang saved the Ma- chine and wade the Capitol graft possible. In the same way itis ying to save the Machine now by the election of Sheatz and it is getting assistance from the same short- sighted men who helped it to elect Penny- packer. Is therea manin Pennsylvania who believes that if Robert E. Pattison bad been elected Governor in 1902, $9,- 000,000 conld have been expended secret! by the Board of Public Grounds aud Build- ings and $6,000,000 of it stolen while he was a member and president of the Board ? Certainly not ; the question carries its own answer. Not one dollar would have heen spent without closest scrutiny and widest publicity. Every citizen of the Commonwealth knows it. The ‘‘eminently and respectable’ wen and newspapers that helped to defeat him and to elect the Machine candidate helped to open the vaults of the Treasury to Sanderson, to Huston, to Cassell and those who shared the graft with them. In supporting Sheatz they are doing all they can to continue and perpetuate the Gavg against which it is their = hit to loudly protest. The Man Behind, From the Pittsburg Post, A dispatch from Harrisburg stated that the capitol investigation commission bad received information tending to show that a considerable portion of the capitol graft | was used to take up the notes of promivent Republican politicians. The commission should make every effort to verily this. Tha Post months ago called the atten- | tion of the commission to the probability | of much of the capitol loot having been need in this way. It averred that it was a matter of common report that there n large outstanding indebtedness for capitel cantracters. It further stated that it was very like- | Spawls from the Keystone. —For the year ending June 1 there were 520 marriage licenses issued in Butler coun- ty, against 746 during the year ending June 1, 1906, —There were eleven young women in the class of nurses which graduated from the Jobupstown Memorial hospital on Thursday, June 6. —Out of a total of 5,791 pupils in the pub- lic schools of Johnstown, 372 were present every day during the term of school just closed. —Albert Marquis, a civil war veteran, who was an eye witness of the assassination of President Lincoln, died at his home in New Brighton last Friday, aged 77 years, —York county farmers are worried over their tobacco crop and fear there will be a great shortage this year, owing to the cold weather, which has greatly retarded the plant growth. ~The new law increasing the pay of jur- ors from $2 to $2.50 per day, does not be- come effective until July 1, 1907. The jurors for the terms after that time, will enjoy the first fruits of the increased wages. ~The Hyde-Murphy company has just closed a contract to erect sixty houses for the Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburg railroad at Homer City, Indiana county. This firm has already built three towns in that county. They are Iselin, Ernest and Josephine. ~The annual reunion of the survivors of the Fifty-fourth Pennsylvania volunteer in- fantry will be held at Lakemont park, near Altoons, on Wednesday afternoon, July 24. Invitations to this table event, one of those annual reunions that will soon be of the past, are being mailed to all members of the regiment. —Miss Sedla Jowells, of Shamokin, was homeward bound Wednesday when a big black bug settled on her lip and kissed her. The lip immediately swelled lo twice its normal size and the pain was so great that a physician was summoned. He stated that the girl had been attacked by a poisonous kissing bug. —The Central Pennsylvania Lutheran re- union will be held at Lakemont park on July 25. Speakers of note will be present to deliver orations. One hundred children under the leadership of A. E. Davis, of Al. toona, will furnish the music. Lutherans of Central Pennsylvania are planning to be present on this great day. ~—Fire of an incendiary origin entirely de- stroyed the home and stable of Charles W, Shrefller, of Lewistown, early Sunday morn- ing. Stephen, the 15 year-old son, perished in the flames, and the mother was probably fatally injured by the flanies and in jumping from the second story window, after making a futile effort to save her son, who was asleep iu a second story hack room. ~The yellows and the hard winter have made such inroads in Dr. J. M. Dumm’s peach orchard, west of Mackeyville, that he has employed workmen with a stump-puller and steamer to uproot most of his trees. A resetting of new young trees in another lo- cation will be neccessary before the doctor will again have another crop of such fine fruit as his orchards have produced in the past. —W. Cal. Meeker, the aeronaut will make daily balloon ascensions from Mill Hall park during the week of July 4th and will use the largest balloon ia the United States. The first ascension will take place on Mon- | day, July 1st, and vo doubt will attract large | erowds throughout the week. Prof. Meeker | will 1aake a parachute drop daily and intro. | duce some interesting while in id air at each performance specinilies ~(iame Warden Humimelsbaughb, of Clear. field of r. Berrier, went to { Morrisdale and sted Steve comy hloscow, | Charles Jones and Nick Nusbaum for killing ducks. The accused men were taken before i Justice of the Pence MM. 8. Adams, of Cheater | Hill, and were given a hearing. They were | is was likely that banks holding large State | fined respectively $20, #10 and $10, together 3 i ¥ a algo held the notes of prominent Tans (epee | with tho costs. The parties settled, the | politicians which had not been paid by the | amount paid being a total of $50. | i i i i capitol graft in order that the accounts of the depositories with the State treasury might be properly adjuated Tt ie not within reason to believe that the { big capitol contractors and the architeot were permitéed to pocket the $8,000,000 of rofits which are charged to their account. seading politicians of the State were not true to their well-known records if they failed to get a big share of this money. The investigation commission should look into this phase of the matter most carefully. It should show who were the men behind the contractors and the architect, and who shared largely with them in the looting of the treasury. Secretary Taft's Predicament. From the New York Press. Secretary Taft, who complains bitterly that the newspapers have forced him into his predicament as the heredit legatee Ee is MeugRiinR manfully to ex- tricate himself. He bas bad a fair measure of success so far in Wisconsin, where his unqualified praise for the discredited Spoon- er promises to make him impossible as the second choice of the delegation from La Fol- lette’s State. Now he set himself the task of turning Iowa hopeless!y against his involuntary aspirations. In an address at Dea Moines the secretary denounced the stock manipulators, rebaters and other betrayers of trusts, but then he asserted that their orimes ‘‘were the natur- al outgrowth of the enormous expansion of business and of capitol iuvolved in the reading business of this conntry."” While they were to he deplored and con- demned, caution must be observed in the remedial legislation. There was no sugges- tion that aeyidly ought to go to jail. As befits a conservative presidential candidate, Mr. Taft balanced the business in a delicate manner and shuuned the specifics like smallpox. ——While fishing on Fishing creek, Monday evening, Dr. Dave Dale caught geven trout ranging in length from 11 to 14} inches in just ball an hour. And he doesn’t pose as a fisherman. Not knowing the Doctor nor the place some of our com- temporaries, when they read this, will de- clare that he should pose as a liar, but he is not, because the writer was on the gronnd and saw the remarkable catoh made. men had been driven ent, itis claimed, and | Jagier,and that when Mr. Berry was elected t least the shadow of probabili- | these were taken up with a portion of the | —More than £6000 worth of plunder stolen | from the Pennsylvania railroad near Greens. | burg, Pa., was located Thursday Ly railroad { detectives, aided by the local police, in the | reside res of Mrs. John Boros and Mrs, 8. | Slikes, of Wilkesbarre. It was Jearned that Andrew and John Celesko, of Greensburg, were shipping goods to Wilkesbarre, and after they bad lLeen connected with the thefts, an attewpt wus wade to arrest them. They escaped, and the stolen goods were traced to Wilkesbarre. —A crew of eighteen railroad surveyors and engineers are now at Renovo working west toward Keating. A gentleman, who had staked out foundations for a new house at Shintown, near Renovo, was advised not to proceed with the work as the tracks for the proposed new railroad would run direct- ly through the plot staked out. It is believ- ed work will begin very soon and it is gen- erally thought the road is a spur of the New York Central railroad connecting the river line with the Beech Creek road eithir at Avis or Youngdale. —Three hundred men are at work upon the new town to be built upon the site of the old South Fork dam, the breaking of which wiped cut Johnstown. At present all the summer cottages erected by the now de- funct South Fork Hunting and Fishing club have been remodeled and are occupied by men employed by the Maryland Coal com- pany. This corporation is at work upon two shafts which will be rushed to completion. When the proposed mines are in operation 5,000 tons of coal will be taken out daily. Plans are being made for a town of 5,000 in- habitants. —Miss Martha Morgan, daughter of T. 8, Morgan, the Third street clothier, of Wil. linmsport, has suffered for some time with pain in the lower part of her forehead. Tuesday evening Dr, Glosser removed a shoe button from the painful spot, and then it was remembered that twelve years ago, when a child, Miss Morgan bad in some manner gotten the button in her nose. A surgeon was called at that time, but he fail- ed to locate the button and expressed the opinion that it was not there. Now, after twelve years in its queer resting place, it has been discovered and removed. Ee Lo