I... © BY P. GRAY Meex A ——-y Ink Slings. ? —Mr. RAISULI seems to be about all there is to Morocco these days. —Back to the soup for yours will be the greeting the ice cream cove will give the oyster when he appears on Sunday. —“Will SHUMAKER Tell ?’’ bas the State going now at about the same pace thas “How Old i+ ANN?" bad it several years ago. —In this country 132 out of every 100,000 | inbabitants are in jail all the time." After | we get to the bottom of the capitol sandal the proportion will probably be inecraased. —There is some consolation in .the thought that when the President hurls his | anathemas at ‘‘certain malefactors of great wealth” we know he is not talking about us. —The frequency with which coal wag: pass along the streets these days is a f&: minder that the moth balls will soon have to stir out of their cosy nest in our winter | flavnels. —It is reported that JOHN D. lost a mil- lion a minate while stocks were going down last week. Perbaps he did, but there weren't enough minutes to take the Oil King South very far. —Less than eight thonsaud people own all the land in Gt. Britain. We don't know how many owners there are in the States but the Hon. TEDDY R. talks and acts as if there were only one. —The Youngstown, Ohio, man who put $500 in a phonograph for sale keeping and found it gone when he went to get it later might bave known that a talking machine conldn’t keep such a treasure secret long. | —A man has been put in jail over in New York for stealing three tomatoes val- ued at only three cents. My, il such a lit- tle thief bas to go to jail where in the world will we send our capitol thieves when we convict them ? —Pennsylvania will vever be purged until the hope of graft is forever denied the gang. The only way to make this possi. ble is to keep the State Treasury out of its hands. Vote for HARMAN aud the gang will have another prosecutor like BERRY has been. ~The fall election is approaching faster than you imagine. It is time for all per- sons interested in having the very best of- ficials for Centre county, to say a word for ArTAUR B. KiMrorr. He bas been Pro. thonotary for one term and the county has never bad a better one. — Washington county farmers are said to have driven hordes of rats into the river by beating drums. Ordinarily they will be regarded as descendants of the Pied Piper, of Hamlin, until! the President takes no- tice and puts them in his natare faker class or gives the aathor of the story a seat in his ANANIAS club. —W. G. RUNKLE, our nominee for Dis trict Attorney, has heen uniformly coorte- ous and considerate of those baviog busi. ness for the county's attorney. He has prosecuted the public's business with dis. patoh and economy so that he has nothing to fear in asking for a re-election to the of- fice he has so creditably filled. —Those Bayard, Iowa, women who tar- red and feathered six town drunkards went the limit of unique punishment for habitu- al offenders but the results could not have been otherwise than salutary. Wouldn't there be a nice flock of birds hovering around the ice house should the same doze be handed out to a hunoh in Bellefonte —Though a millionaire Mr, STUYVE- SANT FISH seems to be somewhat of a knocker. One blow from his powerful right put the president of the Illinois Cen- tral R. R. ont of business at a meeting of the directors of that road in New York, on Wednesday. Verily, the railroads and rail- road managers are having more than their share of trouble. —The dispatch and intelligence with which eight circus elephants cleaved up a wreck on the Baltimore and Obio on Mon- day, saving the life of an engineer, opens up a new field of possibilities for railroad wrecking crews. Inasmuch as the pachy- derms live to be hundreds of years old com- panies owning and using them would be required to charge off very little for depre- ciation each year. —J13 SCARLET, the Danville attorney who conducted the capitol probe, could probably have fixed himself for life finan- cially had he not gone so couscientionsly into everything. The gang woun!d have given bim anything he asked, no doubt, but “SCARLET is not that kind of a man and he has made a name in the State that will be honored long after the time when earthly riches would avail him anything. —What will it avail Penusyivania if JonN O. SHEATZ ia pat in charge of the State Treasury ? Granting, for the sake of argument, that he is not in sympathy with the crowd that has looted it he is, at least, in political sympathy with them and is friendly with their friends. While he might vot conspire with them it is reason- ably certain that as an official he would be merely passive in the effort to ancover their crimes. He would not be active. An active, determined Strate Treasurer is the kind the St tv follow up BERRY'S initiative. will pet without fear or is whut can be expect. AN. Itis idle to think ; wenld make spoh aw of- | convention to put some restraint on the how honest he may be personally. - . VOL. 52 The Crowning Legislative Iniguity. No hill ever introduced into the Legis- lature was as palpably in the interest of crime as that which divested the courts of Philadelphia of the right to fill vacancies on election hoards and lodged that power in the board of city commissioners. There have been various iniquitons measures con- sidered in the General Assembly of Penn- sylvania. At one time the body became so notoriously corrupt that public zenti- ment forced the creation of a constitutional bedy. Siuvee that legislation bas been con- sidered and even enacted to promote traffic in the virtue of women and encourage vice io men. The PUmL bill was a specimen of this sort. Pollution of the ballot box is the high- est crime, with the exception of high trea. son, in the criminal catalogue. Oue of the great statesmen aud earnest patriots of the country has said that it is treason for the reason that it subverts the principles of the government and poisons the fountain of authority. Ballot box stuffing is the in- flac neing canse of all graft and corruption in office. The great cost of such sinister service can he met only by a ‘‘rake-off,”’ through excessive fees, fraudulent con- tracts or stolen franchises. All these sys. tems draw unjustly from the pockets of the people. Besides they debauch public mor: als and pervert popular government. Thete was no concealment of the purpose of the bill to deprive the courts of Phila. delphia of the authority to fill vacancies on election boards and hestow it upon the city commissioners. The courts were slow in responding to the demands of the machine that they obey the mandates of the hosses. With men like BippLE, BEITLER, FIN- LETTER and ARNOLD onthe bench there seemed little hope of prostituting it to the base uses of eourvy politics for a long time. Meantime the machine coveted unrestrain- ed power in debauching the ballot. To ae- complish this vicions desire, the measure in question was devised. JAKE WiLD- MORE and HuGH Brack could be depend. ed upon. : When the hill was introduced into the Legislature the machine whip was prompt. ly summoned to service. The enormity of the proposition revoitgd svery decent and honest member of tEghody. Many earnest Republicans protested against the prostitu. tion of power. But Quay and PENROSE aud DURHAM were insistent. The, felt that such desperate measures were neces- sary to their continuance in power and the perpetuity of their ligense to loot. They realized that unless such expedients were invoked there was nasecurity for the ballot box stoffer or safety in impersonating voters. They couldn't even hope for es- cape from punishment for themselves much longer unless such adaw were enacted. Among the ardent gppporters of this ciim- inal expedient in thé House of Represen- tatives was JOHN O. 8HEATZ. The notori- ous SALUS of press mpzzler fame and the equally malodorous SHERS, of Philadel phia, were the sponsors for the measure. No one of the slightest pretense to political integrity would speak for it, even its au- thor dodging an inguiry and leaving to SHERN the disreputable duty of defending it. Mr. SHEATZ was able to stomach it, however. In company with RIPP, SALUS, PUHL and SHERN, enial machine serv. itors, be shouted hi# approval of the pre- liminary to more exfeusive bailot frauds. In fact dming bis firet session in the Legis- lature he was alway& on the wrong side. Later he found it adeantageons to straddle. S———— Taft's Egreglous Blunder. Secretary TAFT is making a picturesque donkey of himsel! os bis western trip pre- liminary to “girdlipg the globe.” The | whole business is an electioneering enter- prise in the interes§, of ROOSEVELT'S re- nomivation and TAFT is waking it ridica- lous by his political jabbering. His first speech at Columbus, Ohio, was rather adroit, though his palpable effort to ‘‘run with the bare and hunt with the hounds” on the tariff question was disingenious. His second speech, at Louisville, Ken tocky, was an absurd attemps to placate the negroes and please the white folks of the Soath. Bat he touched the limit of absurdity in his Oklahoma speech in which lie adopted the scolding babit of his prin- cipal. . Secretary TAFT is disappointed with the political conditions; of Oklaboma. Like other leaders of his party be expected that the people of that territory would be dra- gooned into electing g Republican Legisla- ture which would two Republicans to the United States te. He has discov- ered that there is no hope of such a result and wants to prevent the election of any Senators.” The only feans of accomplish. ing that is to defeat be constitution adopt- ed by the conventio'and the Secretary of War bectered the vgbers on that point to the limit of endurabce. He threatened, cajoled and offered bfibes in turn but the indioations are that His only recompense is the contempt of those addressed. - | on any subject in return for political ac- tractive attribute but since that can have trafsm of The Secretary of War has no right to A STATE RIGHTS AND BELLEFONTE, PA., —— promise legislation by Congress of any sort That is nothing more nor less than a form of bribery and a mau who will re- sort to it is more likely to Jand in the pen- itentiary than in the presidential office. The public had some respect for Judge TAFT until he developed this very unat- little more than contempt. The people of Oklaboma know what they want aud can neither be coerced nor fooled into self-stul- tification. The copstitution which they have framed is admirable in may respects and fairly good in all. If they adopt it the President will not dare interfere. Cortelyon’'s New Political Scheme. Secretary of the Treasury CORTELYOU announces a new and novel method of re- lieving the country of the financial strin- gency which is already present and the greater scarcity of carrency which is im- pending. He will distribute the treasury surplus in the banks of the country, he de- clares, and make money as abundant as ‘‘leaves in Vallambrosia.’’ The Secretary will not place the fands in the big banks of the financial centres. Both of his pred. ecessors in office did that and it provoked adverse criticism rather than fulsome praise. It served its purpuse, however, which was to raise campaign funds, but that was all. In fact it did quite as much harm as good to the party. CORTELYOU is more expert in the work of raising corruption funds. As chairman of the Republican National committee during the presidential campaign he very nearly demonstrated the possibility of get- ting ‘‘hlood out of a turnip.” In other words, he extracted fauds from the vaults of trusts and corporations, the managers of which were not actually friendly to the purpose for which he intended to use the fande, aud compelled actual enemies of his candidate to pay other peoples’ money for the promotion of interests to which they were ahsolately hostile, "It is not surpris- ing that so consommate a collector would bave new ideas to put in operation in the work which is so important. Bat while the novelty of Mr. CORTEL- You's scheme must be admitted, the al-| PHY bequeerioned. The old system of relieving the financial stringency, real or imaginary, served the purpose. But the big banks in the financial centres are not as friendly to the President as they usad to be. It is not that they are actval- ly afraid of bim for they know they can get him when it is necessary. Butas a high officer of the Pennsylvania railroad once said of the late Senator Quay, “‘heis too expeunsive.’’ Therefore CORTELYOU has determined to deal with the emall' banks direct, as QUAY always did, and bis new scheme is in pursuance of that plan. He will farm the public money. Delaying the Prosecution. There are no signs of a movement to begin criminal proceedings in the courts of Dauphin county against those inculpated in the grafting operations at the State cap- itol, at the September session. The report of the commission was made to the Gov- ernor three weeks ago and declared un- equivocally that conspiracy and fraud been revealed. The supplemental report sigued by Senator DEWALT and Represen- tative AMMERMAN recommended criminal proceedings at the earliest possible mo. ment. The Dauphin county criminal court sits on Monday, September 23rd, for | the fall term. Unless the cases are tried | at that term they cannot he heard until after the election. They may not be tried at all, While the Legislature was in session the minority members insisted that in the event of adjournment before the completion of the work of the investigating commission, provision be made for the publication of the report. In folfillment of an implied agreement to that effect a resolution was adopted that the report be made to the Governor with an understanding that it be immediately made public. The regular re- poit signed by all the members of the com" mission and the supplement signed by Messrs. DEWALT and AMMERMAN were presented to the Governor, but only parts of them bave been given to the public. It is eid that the salient features of the sup- plemental report have been concealed. : The obvious purpose of this juggling the subject is to pervert the work'o! the com- mission to the service of the machine. The real facts are concealed in the reports, and the measure of culpability as well as the persons implicated, left to conjecture. Meantime the machine managers will claim’ that it is the intention to prosecute and punish the perpetrators of the crimes. Bat. they don’t prosecute and they can’t punish; until after the election, avd if the resuit is favorable to the machine candidate there will be neither prosecution nor punishment. The experience in Philadelphia is substan. tial evidence of this fact. The machine is completely restored to power and plonder there. : 4 . phia. iis t the old method of awarding manio ipal doutracts bas been resumed in Phils delpliia, is no longer a matter of do The dther day bids for work lor the city the a¥uount of nearly a million and a quar ter of dollars were opened. There were three bidders, JOHN M. MACK, JAMES P. McNicHoL and another. The other was bowled out, as he himself declared, by a clerical error in transcribing bis bid. The competition was, therefore, between Mc- NicHOL and MACK. According to every account of the figures MACK was the lower bidder. The differences on different con- ditiose ran from four thousand and odd dollars to $22,000. No matter which grade of controllers was used MACK was entitled to the award. But be didn’t get it. After an uuneces- sary and suspicious delay the award was made to McNicHOL. How this resalt was reached is a matter of conjecture. The exact figures of the two bids are : For low- priced controllers, McNicHoL §1,108,470.- 50 and Mack $1,102,050.00, she difference in favor of Mack heing $7,420.50. For medium priced controilers, MCNICHOL, $1,132,510,50 and Mack §1,110,450.00, difference in favor of Mack $22,060.50. For high priced controllers McNIcHOL $1,- 158,310.50 aud Mack $1,153,650 leaving a difference in favor of MACK of $4,660.50. Under every rule of justice, therefore, the coutract ought to have been awarded promptly to MACK. Bat the director who had the disposition of the matter, lett the decision in abeyance, took a trip to Atlan- tic City and upon his return announced the award to McNicHOL. Everybody knows who McNICHOL is. In secret association with DURHAM he bad been looting the city for years until an at- tempt to steal the gas works, a couple of years ago, aroused public resentment to such a pitch that all the pirates were oblig- ed to seek safety in seclusion. Last Feb- ruary, however, JOHN F. REYBURN, an eminently respectable gentleman, was elected Mayor. Daring the canvass for that result REYBURN made liberal promis- ea of reform and McNICHOL declared that he would never apply for another munci- | pal covgsact. Thus deceived the people ‘ReYBURN and McNICHOL bas re- sumed business at the old stand and adopted the old methods. It the machine candidate for State Treas- urer is elected in November the same re- sults will follow in the State. The old pirates will be restored to power and tbe looting resumed as before. Roosevelt's Last Blafl In his Provincetown speech last week President ROOSEVELT, with characteristic cant and proverbial disregard of the truth, declared, ‘it is idle to ask we not to prose- cute criminals, rich or poor.” It is idle to “| ask him to prosecute criminals who can serve the party by immunity. Three years '| ago ROOSEVELT made a great pretense of prosecuting rebaters on the Santa Fe rail- road. He employed eminent counsel at vast expense to the public to investigate the charges. The lawyers proceeded as if the President were in earnest. They devel- oped tbe facts aud forced PAUL MORTON to the confession that he, as vice president of the Santa Fe railroad, had rebated to the Colorado Fuel aud Iron company, of which he was also sige president. Jupsos HARMAN, of Cincinnati, of the eminent counsel referred to, made the ree port of the investigation. He said that the rebating had not only been proved but that the responsibility bad beeu fixed. PavuL MORTON, he showed, who was traffic man- ager of the Santa Fe was also shipping manager of the Colorado Fael and Iron company, and tbat he had used the rail- road of which he was aun officer to benefit the manufacturing company of which he was al0 an officer, #0 that hotb the crime aud the selfish purpose were revealed. Judge HARMAN recommended the criminal prosecution of MORTON, who bad meantime hecome a member of ROOSEVELT’S cabinet, with the idea of waking au example of a confessed ‘‘malefactor of great wealth,” but ROOSEVELT refused and insisted that a nominal fine of the stockholders of the road conserved the interests of justice. The truth is that ROOSEVELT isan all! around faker. He is mow protesting hie determination to prosecute rebaters in the .| ctiminal courts becanse he feels confident’ that his owu personal friends will be able | & to escape by pleading the statutes of limita- tion. They bave bad sufficient notice of his purpose to make the bloff avd though’ the Standard Oil company and other ‘“‘in- iquitous trusts’ were liberal contributors to the corruptich fund which bought his vast majority, be made vo personal prom- ises to them. Like PENNYPACKER of this State he is a frand and bumbug and like that old moral degenerate, be depends upon popular credulity to make bis binff good. It is hardly probable that he will succeed much longer. —Picnic days : are these. Let us hope -! that picnic waysare always as beauntifal. “w LE Vows 5 RRR 4 ive Mr. Tafs that ernment ‘has served us well | bund: rs bas not i T ntly expre heals ie pie "ih Seg r. elt, whi T leit ota fact that over thee ry noisy people, thereto Roo offiebolders, Buve for at. Joust i past denon : tatives igi@on- + and in a ta never led to dé the of Mr. WB's sponsor in i “Election of setily the people is not enough for him,’ - Mr. Taft. ¢ Mr. Br ues Jreached election of senators by the or easily twenty years past. And l# up from these two propositions Mr. BF! denounces any on Joutkeer million electors should be asked to Ifgis- late directly. He believes in the reféren- dom in subdivisions of a state be thinks that as applied to nati fTafys it is entirely impracticable. He believes furthermore that the people shoul@deave such matters to the decision of theirf@pre sentatives skilled in the science of législa- tion. How thoroughly skilled in pe, how thoroughly devoted to the peopl the men sent to congress from Mr. 's home city of Cincinnati, the men sent {rom Chicago, and the men sent from St. Louis or from any other great city ? Is it to trust them than to the people ? Is thisa government by the people and for the peo- ple, or by professional politics for them- selves ? Mr. Taft goes ahead to say ; *“Think of the bility of securing a vote of 14,000, of electors on the 4,000 items of a tariff bill.”” Well, think of it, bat let us look back over history and think of the time when the Democratic party elected a congress of representatives of the people on a tariff reduction platform and instead nothing except a re of the Te ih ay bill. PD bink of the times in the Republican party bas asked for support, as Taft is now ask- ing for it, on a promise of tariff revision after the election. Pol history iu this country justifies rather appeal to the people than the confidence. which Mr. Taft oui ask us to repose in elected represent. atives. Better Dusiness Assnred, From the Pittsburg Post. Reports from all sections of the country as to the sentiments of men who are promi- nent in all branches of busivess indicate that there are no good grounds for taking pessimistic views as to the business out- look. These reports also clearly show that the overwhelming sentiment o! the zesple is in favor of the rigid enforcement laws against tions and men of wealth ed in their persistent viola- tion. The efforts of these men to cause panicky conditions because they are being required to obey the laws have been fully discounted by the people generally. The latter thoroughly understand the situation, aud they decline to sympathize with the law-breakers or to be frightened by them into committing indiscretions which are not warranted by the actual business con- ditions. Financiers of the greatest experience and highest reputation declare that the present scarcity of money is world-wide aud not confined to the United States, and that therefore the enactment and enforcement of laws in this country preventing dishou- esty by corporations and men of wealth cannot be held responsible for this scarcity. They also assert that the present situation in the money market isa thing, as it will serve to check speculative enterprise and to place business generally on a sound- er basis. It is plain also to sensible p-raons that if the big corporations are compelled to do business in strict accordance with law and our maulti-millionaires can no longer do as they pleaseand hold themselves above the Iaw, the result must soon be to inspire the people generally with greater confidence in the leading business enterprises of the country. Consequently wher the Wall street crowd bave been compelled to bow to the inevitable and the affairs of our big corporations generally have come to be ad- justed to the vew condition of things, we may look for a greater and more surely fonnded prosperity than ever belore. Stuart up Against it. From the Harrisburg Patriot. It is now ten days since the Capitol In- vestigating Commission made its final re- port recommending the criminal and eivil prosecution of all the guilty. The Com- mission named several men as guilty. What action has the Governor or the At- toruey General taken since they received the report of the Commission to prevent the men accused by the Commission from escaping to foreigv countries from which they could not be brought back or from placing all their tangible property beyond the hope of recovery by the State ? Mean- time the statue of limitations is runoing ‘and soon the crimivals will be immune un- ‘less prosecutions are begun. It is true that it is said bills of indict- ment are being prepared, but it is not cus- tomary to postpone the arrest of an acc criminal until after be is indicted. Why should it be doue in the case of the Capitol rafters ? Are they entitled to more tender consideration than the petty and poverty. stricken thief who gets away with a pair of shoes or a piece of lead pipe ? One “Busted Trust. From the Phiianeiphia Record. : The Standard Oil company keeps on dauntlessly payiog dividends. So far this year it has paid a share, same as last ear. So long as it holds secure the tax- ng power inherent in its control of the oil supply it can pay ite fines and its divi. dens and maintain ite accustomed se- renity. — September 4th ie a most important day to every Democrat. It is the last day upon which he can register. oo. » Spawls from the Keystone. —Iu order that the people may be well in* formed as to our game and fish laws, 100,000 copies of these laws will be ready for distri- bution in a few days. —Mrs. Jemima Rahm, the oldest resident of Huutingdon, and perhaps in the county, who is 93 years of age, took her first trolley ride a few days ago. The lady highly en Jjoyed ber trip. ~—William Erney, a hackster, living near New Cumberland, Cumberland county, was held up early Tuesday morning on the high- way, by two men riding in an automobile, and robbed of $41. —The Barnesboro Siar printed its last issue on its job press. Its troubles have been numerous since the big fire, but its new p: has arrived and by and by it will assume its usual proportions. ~The seventeenth child, a son, was born Mr. and Mrs. W. Scott Marsder, of Norris of | town, on Tuesday. Of the seventeen chil- dren, there are thirteen living, six boys and seven girls, and ali at home. The father is a court tipstaff, —Fully 2,00 firemen were in live in the parade of the firemen's convention at Clear- field on Friday. The honors were carried off by the Ponxsutawney department, which took three first prizes. The Jersey Shore company, took two. —A 3-weeks-old baby was left on the doorstep of the residence of J. Woods Mussi- na, jr., of Williamsport, on Friday evening. It was well provided with food and dlothing, but there was no clew to its identity, It was taken to the city hospital. —A roll of bills eight inches thick and containing several thousand dollars, and a large bag of silver, were found on Saturday night in the house of Fortunate Calabra, the alleged king of the Black Hand society, at West Berwick, by the state constabulary. —Mrs. Elizabeth Boyer, aged 36 years, wife of a negro laborer living at Muddy Creek Forks, York county, who has always been a very black woman, is turning white. Her face is already quite white and much of her body is also. Her changed condition is causing much attraction. —While out for berries recently F. A. Gast left bis purse lie on a rock at Crab Apple Orchard, Union county, and it lay there for a week and nobody was curious enough to look for it. He went for berries about a week later and found it just where he had left it. —~Shortly after 2 o'clock Friday afternoon, Clair Holtzinger, aged about 14 years, mes- senger boy at the Postal Telegraph office, in Tyrone, met instant death in the elevator shaft at the First National bank building. The boy attempted to get out while the elevator was moving upward, aud his skull and body were badly crushed. —Howard Figart, of Altoona, av elevator boy, values his toes at $25,000, the highest price on record. Figart was iu charge of an elevator in the Altoona Trust company block, when the car started unexpectedly, and his right foot was caught in the door, all the toes being cut off. He sued the Trust company Thursday for $25,000 damages. —Solzadori Seiasisi, an Italian employed in the fire clay mines at Monument, was so ‘badly injured last week that death cnsued two hours later, Seiasisi was coming down from the mines on a traiv of loaded clay cars and in shifting the cars on the switchback ran off the track, throwing the unfortunate man under the wheels, which crushed in his chest. He lived until 7 o'clock. —Mrs. Anua C. Sprout, of Williamsport, through her attorneys, 8. T. McCormick and John E. Cupp, has brought suit against Fred M. Lamade to recover $5000 damages for injuries sustained at the Lycoming opera house on March 4th, 1905, when a large iron slide used in connection with an apparatus for projecting calcium lights fell from the gallery and struck her on the head. —The peach season has opened in Cum- berland county, not on a large scale, but on one that is sufficient to tell that big prices will be obtained for the fruit this year. While the high prices are altogether to the liking of the peach grower, and he appre- ciates them, he is comfronted with the un pleasant fact that his crop will be ouly about halt the amount shipped in 1906. —Rev. F. L Bergstresser Sunday tendered his resignation as pastor of the first Luth- eran church of Tyrone, and announced that the final sermon of his pastorate will be preached Sunday, September 8th. Rev. Mr. Bergstresser is the dean of the Tyrone clergy. baving been pastor of the First Lutheran congregation for more than fifteen years, during which time the cosy parsonage and handsome new church have been built. —Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Mullen, of Wood- land, Pa, are home from their wedding trip, which had been deferred thrity-five years, Their journey was to Buffalo and Niagara Falls. They both declared they enjoyed the trip as much as if they bad taken it after their wedding. Mr. Mullen is a farmer of the old school. The bride and bridegroom of thirty-five years are both in robust health and were heartily congratulated on their return by their neighbors. ~—Annie Bair,aged 14 years, was kidnapped from the campmeeting of the Church of Holiness in Clement's park, near Sunbury, Monday night, aud no trace of her has since been found. She was sitting on a camp stool in front of her uncle's tent at about 9 o'clock, when two strange men approached her, They threw a black hood over her head before she could cry for help, and car- cied her swiftly from the camp. No clue has been found as to her fate. —While traveling along the ridge road, near Prospect Rock, Mifflin county, in a heavy electrical and bail storm, at a late hour Saturday night, the wheel horse in a team owned by Frank McCallips, a farmer esiding in Ferguson valley, was struck by lightning. The animal was completely disemboweled. The owner and the other animal escaped injury, but George Price, who was walking alongside, with one hand rest- ing.on the wagon, was struck and his hand and arm seriously burnéd. His lower limbs were paralyzed so badly from shock that it was necessary to remove him from the sceue in an ambnlance. The bolt had evidently followed the steel teace chains of the bar ness on the dead animal, avd tbe bindings of the wagon on which Mr. Price’s band vested.