”> spuwis from the Keystone. —There are 32.227 taxables in Cumbsis county snd the total valuation of propexiy: is $3955.65 Tne property valuation eff Johunstowa is $16 702,440 —Rich deposits of giass sand and fire clay bhuve been discovered pear Coral, in Centre township, ludiana county, and it is said thet the same may be developed by a numberof capitalists who have sccured an option on the same. —Between May 5th and Jaly 31st, Harry Stock, of Rush township, Dauphin county, killed sixty-five foxes aud fifty six minks, and the county commissioners have just paid. | him $186 bounty, under the provisions off the new law, | =—Frank Barton and John Burkhart, twe Fim thé Sonumtiwe Demossal i prisoners awaiting trial for petty mis— . | demeanor, escaped from the Clinton county : : | Recently two distingnisbed Republicans {Jarl on Saturday afterncon. Burkhart was bave taken their stand for “Government by © ; . . | ptured shortly after the escape but Bax— | Injubetion.”” Mr. Tats, both in his Colam- | =~" Co Lo —Canf@lidates are getting as busy as bay fever noses. Their day is drawing nigh. —A vote for ARTHUR Kimport for Pro- thonotary will be a vote for a thoroughly capable deserving public official. —A hopefal sign for the grod of Peon- sylvania politics is JOE SIBLEY'S announce- ment that he intends to stay retired. —It is not a reflection on the art of the beauty doctor to remark that her best cus- tomers | The answer of the Reading companies to sults. gieiibe ones who abow Sie" Jeues res the accusations of the government with re- | spect to the coal trust, is an extraordinary, —WILLIAM GROH RUNKLE is an aspir- | not to say a startling paper. It might T RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. . A., SEPTEMBER 6, 1607. _VOL. 52 Roosevelt is to Expensive. NO. 35. i Government by Injanction. Governor Stuart a Fake Reformer. ar— Ri i tree. He is all politics and one of the most | intensely partisan speeches be ever made Z was a Memorial Day address in which | Ou esteernt f+iend, the mein, appears politios was ahont as appropriate as a dog to be overwoiking Governor STUART'S reputation for probity aud patriotism. We fight is at a Sunday school pisvie. His ave uo doabt of Governor STUART'S pers ant to succeed himself as District Attorney of Centre county. He has been a good one. | Why not vote for him again ? —This year the American farmer bas earned one billion dollars more thau last. The lightning rod agents and Bobemian oats venders will please take notice. —Here’s hoping that Steel common will go to par, if thereby CHARLES M. ScHwWAB | will be made able to begin that million dollar industrial school at State College at once. —The Pittsburg Post says ‘‘the reopen- ing of the schools will be welcomed by the children who are tired of play.”” What strange children they must bave in Pitts. burg. —1I¢ is a little early yet to begin to trace typhoid fever to the oyster, but he will come in for his share of the blame before the season advances much farther. This you can gamble on. —Judge PARKER having avnounced that he would not consider another nomination for President we presume that he is fully convinced of the hopelessness of trying to lead a party that won't follow a leader to victory. : —Old ex-Queen LiL, of Hawaii, is to marry a three hundred pound Prince from Tahiti. According to the news annouunce- ments the Prince must be short on every- thing but avoirdupois, as nothing else is mentioned. —Only a few days more remain for the Summer girl. If she has not already done 80 not a moment should be lost in the effort to land some one who will relieve her poor old dad of the burden of footing millinery and lingerie bills. —The President is to deliver six speech- es during the present month. This means six different spasms for Uncle Sau, for re- ally man is about worn out adjust | ing bh $0 each new whim of a very peSTiNG nl whimsical ident. —It MARK HANNA really did buy the support of the coal railroads for the Repub- lican ticket and Mr. BAER comes to trial for declaring that he did who is goiog to tell the court's officer where he will be able to serve a summons on MARK ? —Jim McNicHoOL having formally an- nounced the candidacy of Boies PEN- ROSE to succeed himsell in the United States Senate we presume there is already a chorus of Hail, Hail the Gang All Hears among the thugs and ballot box stuffers of Philadelphia. A government chemist is out with the theory that one hundred years will be the average age of an old man before many generations have passed. Perhaps it will, but not if the breakfast foods of the pres- ent day are expected to contribute to the longevity. —A river will not rise any higher than its source nor would JoHN O. SHEATZ be any better in the State Treasurer's office than the gang that wants to put him there. Take no chances. Vote for HARMAN and be sure that the lid will be kept off until the scandal is fully revealed. ~The collapse of the great cantilever bridge at Quebec with its attendant loss of eighty lives is another admonition against the precipitate haste with which we strive to do things nowadays and the colossal proportions of our undertakings. Noth- ing is too big for American nerve and American brains to undertake, but does it pay? We were just as bappy and just as prosperous before we got to going so fast so what is the need of sapping at our energies until we are nervous, physical wrecks merely for the honor of being leaders in all things ? ~The Michigan woman who started to paddle her boy in the region of his hip pocket with a shingle little dreamed that the pocket was loaded. It was, however, with a dynamite cap and the first whack caused an explosion that will probably cause the death of the boy and surely did result in the separation of the lady from two of her fingers. Mothers should take warning. In order to avoid such disas- trous results they might kick their boys on the ankie or bat them over the head ; places where pockets full of dynamite caps are not likely to be encountered. ~The Rev. Dr. C. W. BLODGETT, Methodist, of Pittsburg, will probably find the Sunday schools and Epworth Leagues, at least, backing his efforts to bave the church rules so amended as to take the cir- cus and the theatre off the list of places that must not be attended. It seems to us that there would be less of hypocrisy in churches the fewer the restrictions requir- ed for membership. The really true chris. tian would settle all those things for him- self and the church would not have to bear the stigma of putting its seal on those who are merely its members and not christians, , § uamea ati. well be characterized as ‘‘a plea in con- fes<ion and avoidance,” for it practically admits everything that is charged and at- tempts to justify the conspiracy on the ground that it was forced by the exigencies of the Republican party and approved hy the then President of the United States and the present President, then the caudi- date of the Republican party for Vice President. It inferentially alleges that the chairman of the Republican National Committee in 1900, bribed the coal mine owneis to increase the wages of their em- ployees in order to guarantee the election of McKINLEY and ROOSEVELT, and that the candidates and their agent consented to the reimbursement of the mine owners by an increase in the price of coal, ina manner which was clearly in conflict with the laws of the land. We have little sympathy for the mine owners who now assert that they were cheated in their corrupt bargain with the late Senator HANNA. Probably if HANNA hadn’t died and if MCKINLEY had escaped from the attack of an aseassin the condi tions of the illegal agreement would bave been fulfilled, for since BLAINE'Ss time ROOSEVELT is the only man conspicuous in the public life of the country who won't stay bought alter the price has been paid. But the agreement was a erime in itself and [in no respect justifies the conspiracy which followed. The Read- ing companies frankly state that they bargained with HANNA to perform a cor- rapt act and in purenance of toe bargain performed it. Of course HANNA was quite as guilty as those whom be bribed. Bat there was no difference between them in the degree of turpitude and the Reading companies plead ‘‘the baby act’’ when they ask immunity from puoishment be- cause they were cheated. They cat a poor figure as “‘injured innocents.” which bas long pre- vailed throughout the country, however, and one which has heen denied, directly by RoosevELT. That is to say, it alleges, in a manper which proves the fact that the coal strike of 1900 was settled on terms which involved the purchase of votes for the Republican ticket at the expense of the consumers of soal throughout the coun- try. In other words the chairman of the Republican Nationa! committee entered into a conspiracy with the coal mine own- ers to elect the Republican candidates, the consideration being immunity from pun- ishment for a crime against the public. So long as Senator HANNA lived, moreover, the bargain was kept on the part of the government, for when Senator KNOX as Attorney General undertook to prosecute the trust’ he was called off by the Presi- dent and induced to accept the Senator- ship for Pennsylvania by appointment. The truth is that the election of THEO- DORE ROOSEVET to the office of Vice Presi- dent, and incidentally bis advancement to the higher office, was steeped in iniquity. Ithas already been proved beyond the shadow of doubt that Senator HANNA bargained with the Mormon church for the electoral vote of Utah, agreeing to give that polygamous organization a eeat in the United States Senate and that REED SM00T, a MORMON elder, is the result of that infemous agreement. It was also agreed that the fight against polygamy should§be discontinued and in pursuance of that purpose HANNA purchased the Salt Lake Herald, the ablest and most uncom- promising antagoniss of the evil in Utah, and converted it into an advocate of polygamy under the editorship of PERRY HEATH. Now we have the evidence of another conspiracy, equally inimical to public interest and morals. It is about time that the people discover that Roosk- VELT is too expensive a luxury. Teddy's Speech Making Dash, President RoosEVELT, according to dis. patches from Oyster Bay, published the other day, is preparing eix speeches to be delivered during ‘‘a dash through the mid- dle West and South,” about the last of September. The President never journeys as other men do. He always ‘‘dashes’ frompoins to point and as he passes like a oyolone over the country, he emits lan- guage that serves the purpose of speeches. The ‘‘dash’’ which he contemplates for the near future will begin at Canton, Ohio, where a monument to the late President MoKINLEY is to be dedicated. His next stop will be at Keokuk, Iowa, and thence he will go by river steamboat to St. Louis, Cairo and Memphis, Returning by train he will speak at Nashville and Chattanooga. The dispatoh announces that his speech at Canton ‘“‘will be of a memorial char- acter,’ and necessarily non-political, but the author of that statement is probably taking liberties with his;subject. Presi- dent ROOSEVELT can no more make a non. e Reading companies | 48.08" political speech than a fish can climb a speech at Canton will probably be in some part an eulogy of his deceased predecessor in office, but in the main it will bea par- tisan diatribe in which the merits of Me- KixLEY will be asoribed entirely to his haviug adopted the policies of the Republi- can party in his youth. Bat ROOSEVELT bas the speech babit and the public must submit to the infliction of bis views on it in that way whenever be is “igeized’’ with the impulse. Congress coald have stopped it by refusing to appio- priate money to pay the expenses of his periodical ‘‘dashes.”” Bat Congress didn’t do that when it had the opportunity, and though the acceptance of the emolument was a violation of the constitution, there is no escape from it now. The daily news- papers will print the speeches whether they are interesting or not and there you are. TEDDY is winding hiwsell up on both sides and when he does that, like a striking clook he goes off when the time ar- rives. Happily in this case the country is warned in advance and people can take to the woods. The Matter of Reapousibliity. The machine made and machine man- aged candidate of the Republican party for State Treasurer would be amusing if he were not so egregiously absurd. For ex- ample, in the two speeches he has made thus far since his nomination, one at Wil- liams’ Grove and the other in Lehigh coun- ty, he has said that ‘‘a party is not respon- gible for the wrong-doers that slyly creep within her ranks and the men who willul- ly disgrace and betray their own glorious State.”’ Then who is responsible for the grafters who bave composed the office-hold- ing class in the Republican party for a quarter of a century ? Can it be possible that the Democrats, or the Prohibition- ists, or the Socialists are to blame? There rtainly some canse for the effect. ‘The rank and file of the Republican par- ty is made up of honest and patriotic men, no doubt, bat under the rule of the QUAY- PENROSE-DURHAM-McNiIcHOL machine, men of that character are not chosen to of- fice and if they do happen to “slip in,” they are not permitted to stay long. This fact was demonstrated numistakably in the case of Mr. SHEATZ'S immediate predeces- sor in office. In 1900 Mr. J. CLAUDE BEDFORD announced bis candidacy for Representative in the Legislature for the 24th district of Philadelphia. He was an able young lawyer and a geutleman of the bighest character. The machine permit- ted him to be nominated and he was elect- ed. But one term ended his legislative ca- reer. He went to Harrisburg and scrupu- lously, zealously and ably represented the people. He was admonished daring the session, that unless he obeyed the machine he wouldn’t be renominated. But that made no difference to him. He performed his daty as hie conscience guided him and when the time arrived for nominating his successor he wae defeated by an overwhelm- ing majority. The man who was selected to thus ba- miliate Mr. BEDFORD was Joux O. SHEATZ. The gang wanted a man who would serve them instead of the people and SHEATZ bad no trouble in getting a renom- ination. He occasionally dodged the vote and at rare intervals voted against bad leg- islation. But it was only when his vote in the affirmative was not needed, for whenever it was essential to the success of a vicious measure it was cast for the in- iquity. The rank and file of the R:publi- can party may not be responsible for these incidents but the Republican machine is and the machine controls the party. SHEATZ is now the nominee for State Treasurer because he served the machine as a Kepresentative in the Legislature and if he is elected will serve it with equal zeal in the higher office. Bell Telephone Night Rates Abolished. Giving as a reason that the excess of night messages so congested their lines as to render service inefficient the Bell telephone company abolished its night toll rates beginning at midnight Monday night. This order affects messages to Philadel- phia, Chester, York, Carlisle. Chambers- burg, Huntingdon, Johnstown, Pittsburg and Erie, as well as all towns in that cir- oumjacent territory as well as points out- side the State. Bat this revoking of their night rates by the Bell company will not in any way effect the present night rate service of the Penn- sylvania telephone company and patrons of the same can continue to talk to such places as Harrisburg, Lancaster, Reading, Allentown, Pottsville, Scranton, Wilkes- barre, Clearfield, Altcona, Renovo, Wil- liamsport, Emporium and all cities and towns within the radius of the above nam- ed at the usual night rates. " ——Yom Kippur, the Jewish New Year, occurs next Monday, September 9th, sonal integrity and are willing to admit | that he wouldn't stuff a ballot hox while a | policeman of the opposite party was look- ing. But his record before his election to | the office of Governor and his performances | since that event will hardly supply ma- | terials with which to build an ahsolately ! perfect character. In other words, as | Mayor of Philadelphia during the period | that the potorions MARTIN-DURHAM machine was in process of oreation, be hardly attained the Spartan standard and as Governor he has achieved little beyond promises, Iu the organization of his administration the only improvement which STUART made was the substitution of M. HAMPTON Topp for HAMPTON L. CARSON as Attor- ney General and the value of this improve- ment is a matter of conjecture. CARSON was strociously bad and TopD's lawenta- bly derelict. CARSON was either an ignor- amos or a knave and Topp is either lazy or indifferent to his sworn obligations. So far as public interests go, therefore, the difference between them is immaterial while in all other departments the PEN- ROSE servitors selected by PENNYPACKER are continued in office, and the QUAY methods and the machine iniquities are running along undisturbed. For example, when the Board of Public Grounds and Buildings were selecting a secretary to succeed the notorious STOTT, who by the way is still a clerk in the office of the Auditor General, Governor STUART and Auditor General YOUNG insisted on appointing a eervile tool of the ma- chine so that the only difference be- tween the new secretary and the old one is that the new one haso’t been found ons. When the corrupt Lancaster county ma- chine demanded that a worthy glass’ public be deprived of his commission, Soil ox Suan ‘6béyed the order and whe “exigencies of the machine reqaire that the prosecution of the capitol giafters, STUART yields with out even a protest. The truth is that STUART is no better than PENNYPACKER aud will serve the machine in office gnite as willingly and efficiently. He promised to prosecute the grafters during the can- vass for his election and he is making a pretense of fulfilling that pledge some time. Bot when be made the promise he hoped that a way to evade it would be discovered and he is delaying now in the expectation that the election of SHEATZ will open up that way. If SHEATZ is elected the Board of Public Grounds and Buildings will again he unanimously Re- publican and the looting avd plandering will be resumed with an added energy to make up for the time lost during the period of BERRY'S term of office. as i A Scurvy False Pretense. Mr. SHEATZ, the Republican machine candidate for State Treasurer, is ostenta- tiously vehement in denouncing the capi- tal grafters. ‘‘There is no punishment too severe for them,’’ he declared in bis speech at Emaus on Saturday, and in his Williams’ Grove speech he was even more explicit. But he was speakingin a Pickwickian sense. He knows that his election means no punishment rather than severe punish- mens. He understands that PENROSE never would have consented to his nomioa- tion if he favored the punishment of the looters and that Gumshee ANDREWS would betray him if he bad the slightest no- tion that he favors the punishment of those pets of the machine. Joux O. SHEATZ is literally the product of the PENROSE machine. A more servile tool of the machine bas never occupied a seat in the Legislature. He was permitted to dodge the vote on some bills which the machine favored and to vote against others. But such indulgence was only allowed when there was no doubt of a safe major- ity. On the ‘press mugzler,”’ and the bill to take the authority of filling vacancies on the election boarde out of the hands of the courts and lodging it in the County Com- missioners, he voted with the gang and on the Kingston water snake and other noto- riously vicious measures he lined up 1 Rip and CALL and SALUS and SHERN. nomination for State Treasurer is his reo. ompense for euch servile work. Mr. SHEATZ is also fond of referring to his work in increasing the appropration for the public schools from $11,000,000 to $15, 000,000. Asa matter of fact he had very little ¢o do with that and during his two previous sessions in the Legislature made no suggestion of an increase in the school appropriation. The country mem- bers, led by WiLLiAM T. CREASY, have been urging an increase of the school fund for several years but got neither sympathy nor support from the city men. Last fall the matter was made an issue in the cam- | bus and Oklaboma speeches, defends fb. | Senator Beveridge in his debate with Mr. | | Bryan takes up the cudgels in its support, ' Both these statesmen seem to the | Democratic attack on ‘‘goverument by in- junction’ as av assault upon our entire | system of equity jurisprudence. This in an | attempt 49 prove to much. There is a 'cleard on between the equitable | which xisted for centuries and that other use which bas grown up in this age of the Trust aud is used by the ocorpora- tions as a club to beat labor into submis- sion to its every dictate. There is a differ- ence between restraining things and ac- tions which have no basis in justice and restraining actions which have never been forbidden by either moral or legal statues. Mr. Taf: even admite that the use of the injunction bas been abused, but with Mr. Beveridge he contends that we should remedy these abuses, not destroy its nse. Everyone will agree with him in thie. The term ‘‘government by injunction’ has a limited application to the use of she in- junction in labor disturbances : and when one finds that its abuee in labor disputes is almost co-extensive with its use—what then ? The right to assemble, the right to ~The ovens of the new sand works at Tatesville, Bedford county, are fast approach. ing completion. A- new side track is being: laid from the Huntingdon and Broad Top road to the plant and the company is getting ready to make shipments. —John Rohrer, of Esst Lampeter town ship, Lancaster county, had a yield of 336 bushels of very fine pes from an acre of ground this season, and ou the farm of Lud- wig T. Custer, r Adamstown, the same county, one produced 600 bushels. —C. A. Feitz, a butcher of Sharpsburg, & suburb of Pittsburg; while waiting on some lady customers was seized with a borrible mania and cut two deep gashes in his throat with a sharp knife. The customers roa screaming from the shop and he soon fell ens bausted from the loss of blood. He is nek expected to recover. applied for a license to marry at Harrisburg. She was Hannah M. Rothrock, of Steelton, petition, the right of free speech have joined and thus a bold attempt has been wade to disarm organized labor of the ove | weapon that remains for its defence. themselves like flint against the use, or rather the abuse, of the equitable right to enjoin ? Is it any wonder that in our latest and moss up-to date constitation, shat of | Oklahoma, an attempt is made to break | the practice by which a judge at once con- executive aud sends innocent men to jail | withont a trial by jory ? One can appreciate Low Mr. Tals would | defend government by injunction, because | be was one of the first jndges to abuse this right. He has probably uot forgotten bis | famous injunction decisions in the varions lahor cases brought hefore him when he was appointed a judge in Ohio and gi governor, Joseph Benson Foraker. It is only natural that in the arguments of the | present a stetasman should advance some justification for his past record. For Taf: to defend “government by injunction’ would he for Taft. the aspirant for the presidency, to condemn Taft the judge. Sheatz and the Pension Bill From an *Old Soldier” in Philadelphia Record. | Candidate Sheatz seems to be busy try- | ing to square himself with the cid soldiers. | *I am proud of the old scldier,” he ex- | claimed in his Williams Grove speech. *‘Rather than have the veterans think I op- posed the Pension bill, I would forfeit every vote in the State.” | If candidate Sheatz and she other leaders | of the House at Harrisburg had op) the Pension bill openly, the old soldiers | would have greater respect for them. The ! by Senator Cochran, ground admirably. Is provided for bonor- ably discharged Penusylvanians who en- listed and served in Pennsylvania regi- ments and other Pennsylvania commande, and bad ever since been, and would con- tinue to be residents of the State. During the progress of thé Civil War each State was required to furnish certain quotas of men. Every enlistment counted, no matter where the man bailed from. Bat some States offered greater enlistment bounties than Pennsylvania. A Pennsyl- vanian who enlisted in another State prac- tically removed to that State, so far as his State affiliations were concerned. The State where he enlisted received credit for bim and he was a loss to Pennsylvania. Senator Cochran’s bill only intended to provide for those who were true and loyal to their own State. Why should the citi- zens of Pennsylvania be taxed to pay a State pension to a man who had never served in a Pennsylvania command ? Hence the number who could bave e beneficiaries under the original bill was limited ; and the on named in it was deemed i This was the bill shat came down to the House with the unanimous approval of the Senate. The leaders of the House, wanted no State Jeotioh law just yet. But the course of the bill must be carefully pilot ed. They must not queer the old soldier vote. It was left to Chairman Sheatz, of the A ion Committee, to make its impossible. Then the leaders who the bill in tow threw the door wide ng This was taffy for the old soldier. e House amendment included every Pennsylvanian who had been a soldier, ir- respective of where he head served. e enlarged scope of the House bill increased ppriation threefold, and it was y left unprovided for by the Com- e on App gions. This was the sed in the Governor's hands to kill Are we to believe that it wasa ise to Candidate Sheatz when it was ed ? TREE 0 Let Attorney General Todd Act From the Philadelphia Inquirer. The Governor has been put in possesion og VIE oul sation of evidence of wroogdo- ing 8 Sowaright thievery. e commissioners have done their duty and the next must be taken by As- torney General Todd. ——Tonight and tomorrow night will be the last occasions on which you can see the Herald Square Stock company at Gar vever been forbidden by law. Bat they | bave been constantly enjoined by judges ; accompanied by their parents who gave con— and laboring men who violated no statue | or moral law bave been arrested upon sus- | picion and thrown into jail without a trial | by 2 ven the right to strike has been ev-| i brought about by the long continued drought~ Init! any wonder that laboring men bave set Jane article around that section and manx stitutes himself into legisiature, cours and | original bill had been carefully prepared | who covered the! aged 15 years. Tue groom James E. Colbert, also of Steelton, is 20 years old. Both were sent to their marriage. ~The big paper mills of the New York’ and Penna. Co., at Johnsonburg, have heem shut down on account of searcity of water The manufacture of paper requires am ahiindance of pure water, which is a rathex other sections just now. ~The Milton dairymen have given notice that on September 1st they will raise the price of milk and skim milk one cent & quart. New milk will sei! for seven cents quart or four cents a pint and skim milk for ! four vents. The price of cream will remain at 16 eents. They give the increased price of feed as the reason for the raise. —Charles Martin, a well known young man of the Seventh ward, Johnstown, load his left arm Friday in a somewhat pecnliaz manner, He was engaged in au friendly i . hare tussle with a comrade in the DeFreshan, his first start in political life by the RD tule factury, andy when he felt again moving saw. His arm was so badly man gled that amputation Was necessary. —James Connelly, a miner, of Avella, Washington county, who remonstrated against poker playing, was on last Friday night seized by ‘some of the players, who tied him down and then poured turpentine | over hisbody and in his eyes and nostrils and then left him go. Connelly, frantic with pain, roamed about all night, sufferingin tensely. —On July 26th Miss Mabel Romick, of Egypt, Lehigh county, died of a brokem heart, it is said, because Alfred L. Keefer, to whom she had been engaged to be married, had jilted her. And uow the girl's father, | Henry L. K. Romick, has entered suit fox £10,000 damages agninst Keefer, because of the refusal to marry his daughter, causing her death, —The {recent mysterious visit to Selins- grove of William E. Meehan, state commis sioner of fisheries, is explained. It is said that information bad been given the state authorities 'that several men prominent im Jackson township,Snyder county, had seined 92 bass from Penn's creek, two miles north of that place. It will cost the offenders ab least;$1,000 to settle. —With the fall assessments which will be started on Monday, September 9th, 1907, the assessors of the county will get the first ad-. vantage of the new law which provides fox the increase in their salaries. Heretofore the salary was $2 per day but under a law passed’by the last Legislature the legal rate is now $2.50 per day. This will go into ef fect with the fall assessment. —Mrs. Aunie Yoscanage, of Freeland, Luzerne county, has been arrested and held for trial for cruelly maltreating her 9 years old son, Willie. Because of some childish act of disobedience she first attempted to hang Lim, then threatened to stab hin and finally thrust his bands into burning coals in a cook{stove until both hands and fore— armsjwere thoroughly roasted. were made from the works of the Lock Haven Fire Brick company last week, their destination being Japan. They were what is known to the trade as ‘“‘shape’’ brick, being manufactured for a special purpose. This firm has a representative in New York city and about one-half of the output is shipped to foreign countries,including the Philippines and Cuba. —TLast Wednesday morning a horrible ac~ cident occurred at the Summit, near Saxton, Bedford county, on the line of the Hunt ingdon and Broad Top railroad. Howard Greenland, an employe of the railroad, was. freight train up the grade, when he fell off and in front of the locomotive. He was in- stantly killed. He was 28 years old, a ress. dent of Saxton and unmarried. —John Albright, a well known farmer off Mt. Pleasant township, Westmoreland conn» ty, went to the barn Wednesday morning to do his morning work, When he did not re turn for breakfasi members of the family . went to the barn to learn what detained him: and were horrified to find him dead, hears disease having cut short what promised feo be a long life. Mr, Albright was about fifty and yet the Republican majority re- 's. Th unotant] ed to the demands of nan e company bas been giving Es onaTE indalglt a all week and will be just as rather sourvy false pzetense in matter, | entertaining tonight. i ne im— a years old and is survived by his wife and: family, : —On Saturday the youngest bride in the... history of the Dauphin county court records: . —A shipment of six car loads of fire brick riding the pusher, which was helping & . AA
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers