ramp cal iy mined Amerionn will assume such a position. service that would have scales of Missouri justice men ean be 2 in the fate of CHESTER B. oni the New York bank clerk who tried to get away with $96,000 of the bank’s cash. Already he is in a felon’s cell and a life that had much promise and possibly more of an honest fortune than the sum he tried to steal has been wrecked. —The visit of one of the state factory inspectors to Bellefonte this week has re- sulted in orders that fire escapes be placed on fifteen buildings in this town ; some of them so ridiculonsly unnecessary that it looks as though the law were designed more to swell the business of fire escape manufacturers than auything else. —The fact that railroad contractors in this country excavate twice as many cubic yards of rock and dirt in a day, with the’ same olass of diggers, as is being doue on the Panama caual isn’t surprising at all. The one is a government job, the others corporation ; yet TEDDY can’t see that be ought to set his own house in order before he gets the ‘‘big stick’’ after others. ~The action of council in voting to ac- cept the PRUNER orphanage in the face of the wishes to the contrary of the majority of the taxpayers of the town was as con- demnahle as the act of the Burgess in ve- toing the resolution was commendable. Councilmen are elécted by the people to represent the people and nct their personal fanaticisms, petty jealousies or spites. — ioe President FAIRBANKS is reported as baviog dashed from the botel veranda ‘and rescued a lady from drowning in Yel- lowstone lake on Tuesday. There is no doubt of this story’s having been arranged for presidential ad purposes for the hotel is too far from the lake for even a pair ol legs as long as the Vice President's to cover the distance in time to save any one who has fallen in. KxNox will bave to get some one to steal his diamonds now. —1f the Pennsylvania Railroad company has actually begun a crusade against the giggling girls and ‘“‘masher’” boys who crowd its station platform in this place upon the arrival of the afternoon and even- ig trains it bas undertaken a service to the traveling public, as well as Bellefonte citizens, that will be greatly appreciated. The practice has grown to such proportions that travelers get to and from the cars only with the greatest difficulty and ssliould be broken up effectually. ' —Col. HAYES GRIER, of Columbia, has fallen under the ban of the North Ameri- s unwarranted abuse because asa val- hold alti be be called en his com- to vote against SHEATZ for State because of the part he played in defeating the eoldier’s pension bill. Col. GRIER'S war record is better than anything the North American can produce and his ; bis comrades will certainly bear ight than the villilying answer of ded more by expediency than jepessesiative of ello Joussalisn is Civil war as ‘comrades.’ efficient and courageous service in vattle and bivouac conveys the privilege it is bis undeniably. That he is the secretary of indisputable. He bas What Mr. GRIER said that bas so deeply and peedlessly incensed tbiz mercenary SHEATZ wos chairman, incrensed the | a propriations for pensions for soldiers of the Civil war to an aggregate beyond the revenue resources of the State to meet. The bill as it passed the Senate appropriated $1,000,000 which the House Committee increased to $5,754,375. This is a matter of record. It may be added that Mr. SHEATZ personally ‘‘electioneered’ the House Committee to make the iucrease, while be must bave known, il he knows auything, that that was] beyond the resources of the State. That is the sum and substance of Mr. GRIER'S accusa- sion and it is completely supported by the facts. The journal of the House of Rep- resentatives and the minutes of the Com- mittee on Appropriations agree on the point and confirm the statement of Mr. GRIER. On the other band the paper referred to states that “it would bave been easy for Mr. Sheatz and his colleagues to have pass- ed along a bob-tailed measure without providing fonds for the pensions,’ and adds that *‘SHEATZ was urged by some of the gangsters to do it, as that would leave it so defective as to make an executive veto al certain.” This assertion is not supported by any testimony and is so absurdly improbable that it may be dis- missed as a deliberate falsebood. SHEATZ vever made careful estimates of the re- sources of the State in connection with any pending appropriation bill. He appeared to be anxious only that the a tions be large for that polioy him popular with his col- leagues the House and created the legislative lobby which overwhelmed the Repub State convention and secured his nomination, notwithetanding the best judgment.of the party leaders was adverse to such a result unless the country contin. gent asked for is. This | mendacions sheet farther falsely states that SHEATZ busied himself made no effort, so far as the to pass any of the revenue bills, | to He never opened bis wouth in support of any of them and carefal observers of the proceedings express doubts as to whether he voted for some of them. The truth is that during the session of the Legislature he ap to have bad no purpose except the on of his own ambitions, aud te ashieve results he ‘‘sold bimsell body and soul to the machine,’ to borrow that body, The mercenary editor of the the title of ‘boss of the Republican ma- chine,” Has a right to support Mr. SHEATZ in pu of bis bargain. But he bas ni right to wialignantly assail a citizen an soldier fof exercising with to another candidate. the Fifth’ Reserve amasiation is Equally te | I fe fei 5.2 sald Declaration of Independence needed influences to. vitalize or im- to support it, is bad convulsed the o civilized world. Is aroused ‘the rit of liberty in France almost as prompt. : 4 guite as effectively as it stirred the jtism of the American colonies. Even ‘the ¢ British parliament its echo was beard its effect felt. It was the masterful osion of the pent-up wrath of a people | 4 0 iad suffered wrongs for years, and if; » had been no muskets to its bor aud those who sustained bim in the vertheless have become liberty throughout the. of the human mind, the human tongue, since. be b ‘of time has exercised as | great an influence on the affairs of men as * | the Declaration of Independence. It was hardly to be - | PExNYPACKER would nificance of the. oul wade ence. A man who estis equal of CLAY and WEBSTER and is ent in the political : bighest type of He is an able law- bonorable gevsie | that wed ie is.. Belore 8 musket bad been | be No pasty have made a better bom. ination. Recently Wrtiiam H. BERRY, the present admirable State Treasurer, | who would probably have ‘died io the | stated that it required all the courage and | itentiary if he badn't pleaded the statute Acterwiaania that be oonid command to | of limitation to escape just punishment for bed Lo liatssledeet 3 ing aud axious to canonize vioe by ¢ ing & monament to the memory of] a few alin became im upou his induction into | es out of which that immortal instrument the office. They exbausted every effort to | evolved. But in view of his manifest men- induce him to ‘‘go along’ with their | tal delinquencies, not to refer to his obvi. gohemes. He said that the election ofa ous moral shortcomings, it i= about time that be should be quietly dropped into the depths of oblivion. place in which he is so fit to abide and pro- test that his constant appearance on public successor of the same sound fibre is essen- tial to complete the reforms he has be- gun. The Democratio convention selected such a candidate in the person of JouN G. HarMAX. He oan neither be coerced nor revenue bills to provide funds | ¢ the langunge of another bogus reformer in | ! untrathial North American who aspires to oy the same privilege occasions is an insumit to the public con- beguiled to acquiescence in anything which | gojence. bas not the approval of his keen and active conscience. He abhors corruption and will fight it incessantly aud uncompromisingly. It was the concensas of opiuion among the leading Democrats that legal learning is almost as requisite as probity and cour- e in the impending battle for civic righteousness in Pennsylvania. JOHN G. HARMAN is spendidly gifted in all these essentials. Few of the lawyers of the State stand higher in mentaland moral equipment. No lawyer of his age is his superior in learning and ability. He will not only know how to trace So mption but be will have the courage to assail If he is elected the treasury looters will not only be prosecuted. They will be adequately panished. ———————— Roosevelt's Costly Ambition. President ROOSEVELT'S latest absurd en- terpriee may cost the country an expensive war bas it is necessary to the fuldliment of his political ambitions. In other words, the proposed movement of the entire naval force from the Atlantic to the Pacific may provoke a declaration ot war from Japan. Bat it will practically ‘guarantee the re- nomination of ROOSEVELT as the Republi. can candidate for President and he wants to compass that result at any cost in lite and treasure to the country. ROOSEVELT will allow nothing to stand between him- self and his ambitions. SHAKESPEARE'S moss atrocious character, RICHARD III, could have gone no farther than he is will- ing to ventare for another term. There is no possible exounse for the naval templated and Sven Stott ts Going for the Present. According to current reports, JOHN E. S710TT, secretary of the Board of Public Grounds and Buildings, is to be dropped out of the public life of this State. Storr bas been kaown for years as the ‘‘handy man’’ of the QUAY—PENROSE machine. He went to Harrisburg in 1834 as a mes- senger in the Treasury. He speedily de- veloped qualities which make a man inval- unable to those who are operating unlawful schemes. He was promoted rapidly, there- fore, and at the time of the political erup- tion which landed Hon. WiLniay H. BER- RY into the office of State Treasurer, STOTT held the important office of Cashier of the Treasury and Secretary of the Board of Pablic Grounds and Buildings. At the time of the transfer of the office from MATHEUS to BERRY, the most stren- uous efforts were made to induce the in- coming treasurer to retain Storr. Every |! Republican of any influence appealed to Mt. BERRY in behalf of Storr. The im- portunities only excited suspicion, how- ever, and Mr. BERRY determined to dismiss him. As the reorganization of the Board of Pablic Grounds and Buildings, a few days later, Mr. BERRY was asked to vote mous. He again refased, though Governor PENNYPACKER and ‘Auditor General S¥Y- gave him an appointment in the "Auditor General's office, 50 as to supplement the other place. i Of course everybody wondered why so ‘power in this country. say, the mischiet makers in Tokio are Seon Tribe Doi with. ents for their contention by the 8 wii Sita u Orde: at Freon tasy may phon fret on Se ill not only aiitiobs in Siedaure bu ht a vast number of lives and which is to Sud igh a bumilistios if not dst” 2 8 tion. k . _- y the wonder continued until he appeared as a witness before the commission investi- them | gating the capitol gratt. Then “the facts were revealed. He knew so much and told 80 little that conjecture ran riot for a time ™ | and both the Auditor General and the Gov- i . to admit thet his presence in ipo is no longer tolerable. Stott i a useful mav only to those who are en. | gaged in intrigue and for the present, at least, there is nothing doing in that line in Harris ‘ The machine managers are * | not witbont hope, however, and if the Re- publican candidate for State Treasurer is elected ni 1it may safely be pre Yuh Svors, wil be restored to favor and ut Ha Haniel ; x : re | a ope a oe Fae v Desa w Agen! {its workings. He is in touch with nove of | with a thorn. The injury was very painful, A big gas gusher has just been | on the ‘Addison ‘Whisner farm, five from Clarion, which is spouting gas at | | rate of 2,000,000 cubic feet & day. ~The government has acquired 200 deren ined for Nukioual pick purvate 3 Suliyl burg. The land is adjacent to grove, in part of the first day's fight. - | —Although in the heat of midsummer, the city of Chester has several citizens who are looking so far into the future as to their candidacy for mayor next February. ‘| —The residence of William Irwin, in: Du- Bois, was entered by thieves recently and | robbed of $20 and the contents of a child's bank. The silverware was not disturbed. Bl, | The largest number of empty coal barges ® | over moored along the Pittsburg wharves was to be seen on Sunday, when over 300, F | representing a cost of $250,000, were clustered an. | there. —Extremely heavy rains have caused the cellar of the $300,000 court house in Potts- ville to sink three feet in some places. It is J | feared the court house has been undermined | for coal and may collapse. - ~ . ,| —Great damage was done to tobacco, corn Sis I+ | and other crops in the eastern part of Lan- = caster county, on Sunday, by a cloud burst : 4 Ihighduded every stream, deluged low- ae : Washed, the soil away on sloping ii fields. ye * —Bids for the pew $100,000 Pine Street Methodist church in Williamsport have been | opened and tabulated, and the contract will | likely be awarded in a few days. Work will be pushed as rapidly as possible after the contract is let. —Beginning Monday an increase of twenty- five per cent. was made in the wages of em~ ployees of the Macbeth-Evans Glass com- pany, of Pittsburg. The advance restores dhe the wages to what they had been prior to, both na- January 1st, 1807. than work. | —While Mrs, George Berk, of Yoe, York IV wll ht he pale once and | county, waswshutting her young chickens for all uuderted thas this talk of war is | into coops on Saturday evening a large hawk animated bt a tawdry, venal treachery, | attacked her and badly lacerated her face 34s makes Ade with its beak and claws. It is feared she i Seman _| will lose the sight of one eye. ' « Told * —On Saturday Harry Correll,a motorman, ! Who : The Truth. +t | aged 28 years, was suddenly stricken blind %. | as heplaced bis bands on the power haudls, 2=% | to start a West Penn street car at Fifth ave- te lod | BUe and Locust street, McKeesport. His £ y and sudden blindness is a mystery. ~ au of onderts —The waving of a red table cover by. a kuowl- | wind in the parlor of the Jefferson, ‘bo grasp of details, | Phoenixville, on Saturday so enraged a bull by that he rushed through nd overthrew the table and RR wh CE a A é sm sn ae LA 58 0 | that was Sort the. and w the Buests into a panic. everything iu tea | -—While Mrs. Henry Horn, of York, was organization of { which he | plucking roses a few daysago fora friend, . He knows next to nothing of | she jagged the index fluger of her hand ite operations. He doesn’t know an y of ite ramifications. Even its Sapitaa ‘a matter of g aay work’ “3 Has 2 ation and later the baad began swelling, blood iv | Re developed and on Tuesday she concerned and n’t know what in great agony. oy dends it has been paying. He tells this ~The commissioners of Iudiana county i under oath. He frankly pleads the eame | have accepted the bid of the A. D. Orner degree of igoorance of all that the Standard | Architectural and Wool Working company, Oil company bas been doing that Penny. of DuBois, for the erection of the new county — a — We cau imagine no | P packer, Soyder, Mathues and the rest leaded in connection with the $9,000,000 capitol graft. Mr. Rockefeller bas been innocent of any knowledge of rebating or other illegal practices. He has known nothing of the business or other details of the greatest of all trusts. Yet he is the same man who has been lauded to the skies for more than a quarter of a century as the financial and organizing gevius of the age. He is the same man who has been held up as the highest type of the sucoess- ful man whose success has heen due to pa- tient industry, to thrift and oconsumate skill and knowledge. Now which view of Mr. Rockefeller is correct? Shall we believe the oil kiug hime)! or shall we believe those who have made him subject to un- stinted Lulogy? Jail Them! From the Lancaster Intelligencer. Washington is now reported to be mov- in against come more of the trusts, the big trust being the head now offered to br block. This is very well; but wesug- gest that the people would be better pleas- poor home, on the Allison farm near Indiana town. The Orner bid was $121,800, being the lowest of eight propositions made by as many contractors. —During the month of June there were 144 marriage licenses issued at the prothono- tary's office in Hollidaysburg, surpassing all previoug records. The eldest June bride this year was 57 the youngest 16. The ma- jority of them were in their twenties. Thus far this year the prothonotary bas issued 507 marriage licenses. —While Miss Florence Metherill, of Bloomsburg, was riding on a merry-go-round, Saturday, William Strausser threw a small water snake at her to frighten her. She was frightened so badly that she fell from the machine and ianded oun her head. Sev- eral physicians worked over her for several hours before restoring her to consciousness. —Last Thursday evening Peter Grifiin, of Lock Haven, a member of the police force of that city, dropped dead in the corridor of the jail there. The cause of death was Leart ——— POE pic me ed to see a. ive movement to put | disease, probably brought on by over-exer- in jail the fasoals who have been already | tion. He had made an arrest for drunken- uncovered than to find th Qvernment. ness and had considerable trouble in getting for STOTT and make his election unani- | DER kept him in the place, and SNYDER : meagre salacy by the ‘compensation of the b great an interest was taken in StorT, and fh marching on to catob abr s of plun- deters, ton, the first lot still roaming abont thont indictment; since this raises snspi TR the government is perbaps not diag to_bring the scamps to justice. is Harriman, who ought to be in jolly over a man should be, but hin whom the hand of 3he law seems "oe presently e President was on his trail, which now grows cold. Some- thing seems to have dropped in lo slay the energy of the prosecution. And ma we | pl believe that the oe of “tl the tobacco 5 Petia | bat [¢ is s simply a com: | manufacture brim It's not Bato, ju. w makes it so. " of there There is no . wl BP ——On Wednesday R. B. Taylor seoriwe]. ed a new Kelley ten ton steam road roller | and is now in shape to go right ahead with the building of the new state road between Bellefonte and Milesburg, work on which was commenced this week. by the state highway commissioner as in- spector on the job. —In jus “one month, or the new scalp law went into | ‘commissioners have paid | 5 ss of thirty-nine foxes, is and ninety-eight | Coghil hare ed as serious. nr biners who bavs tobacco trust ae ie 8 red to'| minal, save as’ al was in the Harri- | As the road ol must be built within sixty days the work will bave to be pushed quite rapidly, | leg Samuel H. Diehl was last week appointed | since June | his prisoner to the jaii. Mr. Griffin was 50 i. | years old and unmarried. —While Mrs. Horace Stiger, of Mill Hal, A | Clinton county, was cooking dinner one day last week, ‘a package of sulphur, which had been lying on the shelf back of the stove, fell down and caught fire. She picked + burning paper up with the Iutastion of . + throwjus it into the fire when the stu ex- 1 oded and she ‘was terribly burned about % ne head and face. Her condition is did 1 iw go ¥ aptive “iy Mrs. “Anna McCloy, the mother of | A. G. Saxman, of Latrobe, is 93 years age, and last Monday morning liad a re- SOY iasidble experietice. She got out of bed oe making ber way to the bath room - gt het balance Hd’ félt down a ty stairs. The noise of the fall [ Mr. Siz, who went on ‘a tour add found i Li E. Riley, the wil esharre fish me warden, charged with catching der legal size, and sentenced to ; in jail, must Berve his’ sen- Ailes us arfested several weeks ago aby lary on the e Merchants’ , 130 trqut under the ng before for ley when Tg fight iy LL As rsa so °® ~ 3 : Ries >