BY P. GRAY MEEK. — Ink Slings. —R. U. an Elk? —You should attend the HARMAN and BERRY meeting Wednesday night. —A lot of Bellefonters who never bad them before got big horns put on them Wednesday night. —Vote for Krmport for Prothonotary, you want the best man you can get for the office and be is 18. —The rapidity with which Bellefonte girls have been marrying lately leaves no room to question their attractiveness. —Senator DEWALT was a member of the capitol scandal investigation commission. He krows a thing or two abouts it. Goto the court house Wednesday evening and hear him. —Let's get down to the business of roll- ing up a big majority for HARMAN in Cen- tre county. itis an off year, but Centre county is for honest government and is, therefor, for HARMAN. —The prices of stocks are certainly on the toboggan. This doesn’s interest the public nearly as much as she prices of ne- cessities, and just she public's luck, the latter are on the elevator. —80 the Southern Pacific bas been re- bating a little has it. Well, well. If it bad bad PAuL MORTON for its president perhaps the finding out of ite gilt would be the end of its punishment. —Forty thousand kegs of powder blow- ing up at one time was enough to make a wreck of a larger town than Fontanet, Indiana, =o that Foutanet is no more and thirty-five of ber citizens are gone also. —South Africa spends a million dollars a year for musical instruments. That isn’t a circumstance, however, to what Eogland bas heen paying for the music of the Boer guns that she heard down there a few years ago. —The hunting season for rabbit opened on Taesday but up to this time hre'r rah. bit has shown a marked disposition to sit by hiz own fire side and not to ventare out where dogs and guns innumerable await his coming. —The government chemist having a side of beef that has been in cold storage for fourteen years is afraid to eat it. He should send it over to the Smithsonian in- stitute and exhibit it ander the name of FAIRBANKS, ~New York bas a SAM SALTER, ex- cept that his name ie MIKE. He is a bal- lot hox stuffer and is going to be arrested which shows how foolish it is for a ballot box stuffing SALTER to live any where else than in Philadelphia. | —Yoar Uncle SAMUEL has become the gate keeper at the Jamestown exposition, He wants to get bis money back, but the Jamestown show didn’t adopt the motto of our Bellefonte merchant, who advertise. es, “Your money hack for the asking.” —~Earthquakes are visiting us again. The instruments at Washington recorded one about 9 o'clock Wednesday morning, bat up to this time no one has been able to find out where it was. [It certainly wasn’t bear falling in Louisiana under the fire of the President. —If you really want to know how dis- honest things have been in Harrisburg go to the court bouse Wednesday evening and hear what Mr. BERRY has to tell. He can be relied npon to give you the whole troth because it has been largely due to his ef- forte that the truth of the scandal is known at all. —There z:e many reasons why RUNKLE should be re-elected to the office of District Attorney ; the principal one being that he is the best man for the place. He is the more conservative of the two men and not nearly as likely to be involving the county in needless litigation and expense as his opponent. Mr. CHAMBERS is only out for the office for what there is in it. That is his game, no he will need watching. ~The Usited States has two hundred and sixty thousand school buildings, with eighteen million scholars. Notwithstand- ing the liberal appropriations for ednca- tional purposes every community has its quota of illiterate children; beingjiallowed to grow up without the ability to either read or write. It is lamentable, but one of those conditions that neither the law nor public sentiment seems able to circum- vent. —80 the Hon. BILLY MULDOON, ex- champion wrestler and all around fistio sport is to be called to Washington to or- ganize a new dapartment of health. With ROOSEVELT away on every pretext, TAFT and ROOT en roufe somewhere most of the time it looks to us as though work could hardly be making such inroads on those worthies as would warrant the pablie in keeping up a health department for them. Now if it were for the poor department clerks it would be a horse of another color. ~The Nittany Valley—Nittany Iron Co. —P. R. R. controversy is still on and the question of the rights of each party is be- ing more muddied with each turn of the tide. Sapt. GARDNER thinks be’s on top, the Nittany farnace is still making iron and the Pennsy is doing the hauling, Judge MCCLURE is standing pat and she lawyers are all in the air over the situation. The public is interested only in so far as the squabble may effect the operation of the furoace. It is to be hoped that nothing str ——— STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 52 an Crooks tor Sheats, The Pittsburg Republican machine crooks have also decided upon an armistice, so to speak, until after the election. The prose- i i 5 Humbug as well us Fraud Hastily considering the statement of Joux O. SHEATz, machine Repalican can- didate for State Treasurer, that he had cutioo of Senator ELLIOT ROGERS for issuing | 0.4 againes she bill to repeal the charter fraudulent tax receipts last fall and the contest of the election of District Attorney GOEHRING will be in abeyance for awhile, therefore. Former Senator FLINN and malti-millionaire GEORGE OLIVER bave also decided to postpone hostilities in their impending fight for con- trol of the local organization in Pittsburg until the same convenient season and curi- | 0 right to seize the streams of the State | ously enough, Governor STUART has made up his mind to postpone she organization WILLIAM | of the Sasquehanna caval company, The WATCHMAN expressed the opinion, last | week, thas be, nevertheless, had supported the ‘‘watersnakes’” of that session. In others words we declared that she Susque- hanna canal bill was not among the most atrocious of the measares which were de- signed to bestow upon a los of politicians for water powers and control the water- sheds of the Commonwealth for mercenary of the Railroad Commission until after the | purposes. Accepting his statement with election. Whatever differences there are among these politicians they have a ‘ ‘community of interest’’ in the approaching election. GOEHRING acouses ROGERS of felony and RoGERS swallows his pride and postpones his resentment in the interest of SHEATZ. Again RoGERs declares that GOEHRING was elected by fraudulent votes and bas no valid title to the office and GOEHRING wears the insult oncomplainingly iv order to help SHEATZ. FLINN who bas made mil- lions of dollars out of municipal contracts obtained by favoritism if not by frand has | “an irrepressible confliot’’ with OLIVER, who bas acquired millions of dollars from unearned tariff bounties. But they mutu- ally agree to postpone the settlement of fear that present hostilities would jeopar- dize the election of SHEATZ. SHEATZ, it appears, is an object of solici- sade among all the crooks and corruption- ists. His defeat might permanently stop | the golden flow which makes profligates of some and criminals of others in Pittsburg, and by mutnal consent they ‘‘bury the batchet’’ for a time. If SHEATZ is elected the gnarrel can be renewed between RoG- ERs and GOEHRING and FLINN and OLI- VER with absolute assurance that which- ever wine there will be plunder to divide and spoils of war to distribute. The ma chine will then be restored to power, abso- lately, and as one carpet hag statesman in the South said taapother, a few years ago, “there will be many years of good stealing in Penosylvania yet." Sheatz Lucked Moral Courage. According to the testimony of the Phila- delpbia North American Representative SHEATZ left Philadelphia on March 16th, 1903, fully determined to vote against the Susquehanna canal bill, which passed the House finally on March 17th. The es- teemed North American says : ‘‘It should be stated farther that Mr. SHEATZ took special pains to vote right on the Susque- hanna ‘snake.’ While in Phiiladelpbia the day before the bili came up he inquired of the North American when it was to be called. Upou learning that the vote would be taken on the following day, he canceled an important hdsiness engagement, and went to Harrisburg specially to do his daty and vote against the measure.” But when he reached Harrisburg he came aoder the inflaence of Insurance Commis- sioner DURHAM and the other machine managers and VOTED FOR THE BILL. No doubt when he left Philadelphia he in- tended to vote against it. On March 11th when it was defeated he did vote against it which would indicate that he was aware of its vicious character. But the power of the machine was too great for him to re- sist. He hadn’s the moral conrage to say ‘get thee behind me Satan.”” He lacked that quality of probity which opposes wrong under all circumstances. The force of the machine overwhelmed him. He yielded ani then by acquiescence in an error made the false pretense of a courage that he didn’t possess. Yet some of the bogas reformers in the State say now that if SHEATZ is elected State Treasurer he will be able to resist the machine in matters of infinitely greater consequence to the managers of that ‘‘orim- inal conspiracy’’ than the Susquehanna canal bill. They pretend to think that he would stand as Mr. BERRY has stood against gralt notwithstanding the vast in- terests of she machine in manipulating the treasury and public contracts. Nothing could be more absurd. He would do pre- cicely as be did in March, 1903. That is he would serve the machine in she treasury a® be did in the Legislature avd his elec- tion will restore the system as certain as day follows nighs. ~——On Monday afternoon E. B. 0’Reiley and Paul Brosins, of Look Haven, bat both well known by many people of this place, were driving slong the river road in that city in the former's automobile when the machine swerved from the road and before the steering apparatus could be controlled bad planged down over a high embank- mens. O’Reiley was thrown out and es- caped with afew cuts and bruises but Brosins stuck to the machine and when it finally lauded it was on top of him. He sustained a broken shoulder and some bad will arise to canse ite suspension. bruises bat vo fatal injuries. | aud Mr. SHEATZ voted against it. | machine wanted she bill snd after securing their disputes until after the election for | respect to his vote on that bill, therefore, we held that be wae not absolved from the charge made against him. Since that we have had sime to investi- gate bis denial with respecs to the Susque- hanna canal bill and find thas he voted for that measure which he himself denounces as a legislative atrocity. On March 17th, 1903, the measure in question was consider- ed on fioal passage and Mr. SHEATZ voted in the affirmative. The proceedings are BELL EON a | | Homesty Not the Greatest Quality. JouN OscAR SHEATZ was as honest the day be voted for the Kingston water bill as be is today and sbas vote worked no im- pairment of his personal integrisy, it may be said. Bat if the bill had been enacted into law is wonld have evabled a lot of po- litical pirates and frenzied financiers to en- rich themselves to the prejudice of public interests and at the cxpense of the people. It may even be said that Mr. SHEATZ didn’t want to vote for that bill. He didn’t want to vote for the Susquebanna canal bill, either, but he hadn’t the moral strength to resist the importanities of the machine managers. He yielded because be lacked the courage which she public service requires at present. Few people believe that Governor PEN- NYPACKER is personally dishonest. That inotdivately vain old man wouldn’t wroog an individual out of a penny, probably, if | the incident would gain bim a million dol- lare. Nobody questions the personal in- tegrity of Dr. WILLIAM P. SNYDER, re- published on page 1691 of she Legislative Record of that year and on page 1051 of the journal of the House of Representatives for that session. On a previous occasion, March 11, is was defeated on final passage a reconsideration of the vote by which 1% was defeated, procured its passage with the assistance of his vote. Therefore he is not only guilty of voting for a bill which he bimself declares vicious but stands convicted of the graver offense of lying about it afterward. The bill was strongly opposed by the reform element in the Legislature and the single vote against it attracted a good deal of favorable com- ment in she Philadelphia ve vspapers. In some way Mr. SHEATZ managed to put the reporters under th: impression that it was be who had thus defied she machive mana- gers and he was praised generously. Asa matter of faos, however, shat was a false pretense. The negative vote was cast by Mr. FRANCIS, of Pittsburg, who fiad been elected on the citizens’ ticket and Mr. SHEATZ, who served the machine, usorped the honor that belonged to another. Holding up Employes. It appears that Mr. Joux 8. NEIL, chief olerk in the State Department of Highways, has been ‘*holding up’ employes and con- tractors of the department for voluntary contributions to the campaign corruption faud. The incident bas oreated a good deal of comment in official circles, it is said, and Mr. SHEATZ has been moved to a declaration that he doesn’s approve of such things. The machine does approve, how- ever, and that being the caseit doesn’t matter much whats SHEATZ thinks, Gum- shoe ANDREWS regulates those things for the gang and the rest simply acquiesce. If SHEATZ were in office at present he would probably have some of his subordinates working the employes of the Treasury. As a matter of fact every employe on the Hill outside of those in the Treasury de- partment bave already been put under tribute to the extent of three per cent. of his salary. It is called a voluntary ocon- tribution in the other departments as well a8 in the Highway department, but that is a polite fiction. To quote from one of the olerks in the State department, they are obliged to pay or lose their jobe and they usually pay. In addition to the three per cent. they are aleo obliged to pay their ex- penses in going to vote and altogether it is a tolerably onerons burden on them. Be- sides it is a violation of the law and an infraction of the spirit of good government. Bat there is nothing surprising in the revelation with respeot to the Highway department. From the beginning thas de- partment has been boneycombed with cor- raption. Before it had been in existence a year a conspiracy had been formed among the clerks to sell information to contractors aod it has been said shat no contract has ever been awarded by the department un- til after bribe money bad been paid $0 somebody. It is also generally understood that contractors are required to buy road rollers from a certain manufacturer who allows a rakeoff on every purchase. All in all the Highway department is a crime against the State and ought to be reorgan- ized and completely fumigated. ——Bellefonters who went out to the glass works meadow, last Saturday, to see the Bellefonte Academy and the Williams- port High school teams play foot ball got their money's worth, as the game was eo close thas she score stood 6 to 5 in favor of the visitors. Aud at that, it really should bave been an 0 to 0 score as hoth teams made their touchdowns on a fluke. This afternoon the Dickinson Seminary eleven will be here and play the Bellefonte Aocad- emy on the meadow grounds. You are all invited out and also asked to take a quarter with you to pay for seeing she game. Bus the | cently Auditor General of Pennsylvania. He would cat off his band rather than rob an individual of a dollar. Bas be is under indictment now, and with a vast volume of evidence against him, for conspiracy to | loot the treasury of the State, nos for his own advantage bat for the benefit of oth- ers. Asa watter of fact the question of personal honesty has little to do with qual- ilyiog a man for office. A well organized political machive is stronger than any man and no man who is under obligations to such a machine for any favor can resist it if he is in office. PENNYPACKER has exemplified this fact in many ways and Dr. SNYDER bas proved i$ dozens of times. In the Legislatare JOHN 0. SHEATZ demoustrated it in his vote for the Susquehanna canal bill and the vie tims of QUAYism who fill suicide’s graves are grim reminders of the fact. If it had been a Democratic machine WiLLiaM H. BERRY, splendid as his courage and mag- pificent as his integrity are, could not have achieved what he did. As it was his cour- age was taxed to the limit, though he bad no party interests to subserve or personal friends to shield. Therefore the election of JouX G. HARMAN is uvecessary to the completion of she reform he begun and we say that without prejudice to his opponent. Scandal too Fresh, The Governor STUART is unwilling to favor former Governor PENNYPACKER with an honorary appointment ‘‘while the capitol scandal is so fresh,” the public is informed through the newspapers. The position which Mr. PENNYPACKER covets is a seat on the Valley Forge Commission. Such a place woald give that absurdly vain old man plenty of opportunities to indulge in the platitudes with which he is so free. Moreover it is a high honor even for av ex- Governor. The Commission is composed of gentlemen widely known for their phil anthropies and distinguished for civio vir- tues. Membership ou the board is a sort of patent of nobility. It may easily be imagined that if the capitol scandal were not ‘‘so fresh,” Gov- ernor STUART would bave been delighted toname his predecessor in office to that seat. PENNYPACKER served the machine with rare fidelity when ke bad the oppor- tunity. He found much satisfaction in honoring the memory of QUAY and obey- ing the mandates of that arch-couspirator’s snocessor. He entered with great zeal and earnestness into all the schemes to loot the treasury for the benefit of the gang and it would only be ‘‘in the natare of things’ it he should be taken care of now that he is unable to take care of himself. But ‘‘the capitol scandal is too fresh.” Some defer- ence must be paid to publio opinion. It the election were over and SHEATZ eleoted the freshuess of the capitol scandal would make no difference. Before the recent mayoralty election in Philadelphia the machive of that city was quite ciroum- spect, also. People were asked to support REYBURN in order to honor ROOSEVELT. MoNioHOL promised to withdraw from municipal contracts and DURHAM and MARTIN and DAVE LANE resigned their membership in the Republican city com- mittee. After the election, however, RoosE- VELT was flatly repudiated, McoNICHOL re- entered the contracting business and DUR- nAM, MARTIN and LANE retorned to the city committee. PENNYPACKER shouldn't lose hope. ——On Mcnday a letter was received at this office enclosing one dollar which the writer said was for ‘another year’s sub- scription to the WATCHMAN.” But the sender farled to give either his postoffice or bis name, and the postmark on the envelope was very indistinct. The ouly thing possi- ble to make out was ‘‘Hall,”” so that the letter came either from Mill Hall, Oak Hall, Linden Hall or Centre Hall, though we are inclined to think from Mill Hall ; and if any subscriber down there or at any of the ‘““Hall’s" sent the letter he will please send in his name so we can give him the proper oreait. PS OCTOBER 18, 1907. NO. 41. A Machine Asset. From the Pittsburg Post. In his speech at Punxsutawney on Satur- day John G. Harman gave as one of several excellent reasons why a Demoorat should be retaived in the office of State Treasurer the fact that the obief clerk of the State highway department was endeavoring to secare campaign coutributions for the Re- publican State committee from contractors doing business with thas department. The money thos secured will, of course, be used for the purpose of helping the candi- dacy of John O. Sheatz, the machine candi- date for State Treasurer. The contractors who respond to the appeal will not be per- mitted to lose any money. They will be taken care of by the highway department and the people of the State will have to foot the bill, including the amount of the campaign contributions in the end. The State highway department it was publicly charged a year ago, was run in ac- cord with the wishes of Senator Penrose. The chief of the department admitted in a letter that he was unable to appoint any- body to a position in she department with- out the approval of the senator. It is known also shat the machine leaders largely dictate what work is to be done by the department and how it is to be earried on. e contracts for this work also largely go by the favor of the machine. The department is, in fact, run, as was the State treasury under the old regime, as an asset of the State machine. That it is so regarded is proved by this letter of the chief clerk of the department, aj ling for funds to aid in the election of the ma- chine’s candidate for State Treasurer, John 0. Sheatz, Playing with Fire. From Harper's Weekly. The notion is spreading that the fleet is going to the Pacific for any bus peaceful purposes, and that the statement that the trip 1s only for practice is a mere pretense, Sowe people will naturally think that the administration has inside information, and that a Japanese attack upon the Philip- pines is nearer than we common people know. Others will see in the movement an exhibition of the president's talent for forcing an issue. All who kuow Mr. Roose- velt will recall his frequent assurance, usually made in conversation with diplo- mate, thas foreign nations realize that he is a friend of peace because he is ready to fight for is. In view of the sentiment which he represented and illustrated by the article in the Z¥mes, the proposed ex- pedition assumes wicked proportions. It in a distinct menace $0 peace, the pressive. tion of which may come to depend upon the honorable intentions of the Japanese government, which doubtless knows that the American people are not in favor of war with it or with any other power ; and that most Americans who agree with or who are convinced by the writer in the Times regard the whale affair with dissatis- faction, if not with apprehension. In the mean time it would he well for the Ameri- can people, if any power of indignant pro- test remains to them, to assert themselves, and to refuse tu be led into a war, or into the appearance of expecting war. Casste Chadwick and High From the Johnstown Democrat. Cassie Chadwick, former high priestess of frenzied finance and probably the most stopendous woman swindler in the history of the world, died in the Columbus peni- tentiary the other day. Her crime, for which she wae serving a long term of fm prisonment, was that she borrowed vast sums of money on bogus checks and ocertif- joates and muloted many of America's richest men. Her operations caused bank failures and wrecked many business houses of repute. IfCassie Chadwick had ovly organized a corporation and retained 51 per cent of the stock, selling the other 49 per cent at fauoy figures, and then have so manipulated the books of the corporation as ly to take huge sums of money without giving an equivalent in value, ac: cording to present day wethods, sie wonld be as wealthy a woman as she ever was and free from prison taint. The un- happy moral which many Americans are drawing from the death of Mrs. Chad wick and from the recent exposures in the field of high finance, is not that robbery is to be abhorred so much as you are not to make a mistake in the way you do your robbing. Mrs. Chadwick no lessons in the art of robbery from our financiers. If she bad, she would probably now he alive and riob. From the Philadelphia Record. Alter the Standard Oil shall be thorough- ly exposed and ite dissolution as an ‘“‘uo- desirable citizen’ or a ‘‘malefactor of great wealth’ decreed by a federal court, all properties now owned by that company will remain the properties of the individ- uals who now constitute that company. What good is the dissolution going to do? What is the practical result at which the administration aims? Here is a concern that bas not watered its stock. It has pur. sued exactly the te course. Its en- tire stock of a face value of less than a hun- dred millions is worth a good deal over four bundred millions, and has been worth pearly double that. The president wants the issue of securities by interstate incor- porations to be regulated by the federal government ; but would he compel the cor- poration to increase its capital, and if he did, could he prevent the shares from be- ing owned inst as the present shares are? What can his federal regulation do that state regulation cannot do? ————————————— ——Don’t forget that the Bellefonte Academy —Dickinson Seminary football game will take place on the glass works meadow this afternoon. There ie no doubt but that it will be a great contest and worth seeing. Go ont and encourage the Academy boys. The price of admission will be but twenty-five cents and be sure and take your money along. Don’t sponge on the Academy team management. i —— ry —— Spawls from the Keystone. —Forty-nine pounds of pennies were col- lected on Wednesday in the different penny- in-the-slot weighing machines in Latrobe, as the monthly tribute for’ weighing the people of t! ity. —Joseph K&lbach bas just left Reading for Europe to pt to get the long sought tor Spang ane of $34,000,000, for the Spang “heify’”” who number about 400 in that county. This is the third time an attorney has been delegated to go on this mission, —Sunday morning a terrible accident oc- curred st the farth of Clarence Kepbart, in Bececaria township. near Coalport, Clearfield county. in which his youngest son aged 3 years, 6 months, was burned to a crisp, and his barn end contents totally destroyed. ~—1It has been discovered that six veins of coal varying from two to four and one-half feet in thickness and of good quality are on the lands owned by the Karthaus Fire Brick company. The deposit is estimated at several millions of tons, increasing the assets of the company very materially. ~The state board of grounds and build- ings, at Harrisburg, Wednesday awarded to the York Bridge company at its bid of $54, 045, the contract for the construction ofa bridge across the Susquehanna river at Jersey Shore, a portion of which fell into the river due to the collapse of the abutment. —Farmers in vicinity of Bellevernon, Pa., have been robbed of their crops and cattle on a wholesale plan. Thieves in automobiles and large wagons have carried away tons of produce and of butchering cattle freely. As a result the agriculturists have organized a vigilance committee to patrol the roadways at night. —Rev. Francis T. Eastment, rector of 8t. Paul's Protestant Episcopal church, of Phil- ipsburg, has heen appointed by Bishop Darlington, of the diocese of Harrisburg to act as diocesan secretary at the Pan-Aungli- can council to be held in London this com- ing summer. A great honor this to the preacher and the place. —A citizens’ committee, of Newberry, a suburb of Williamsport, bas succeeded in se- curing two physicians to locate there, and practice their profession at the rates former ly charged by the resident physicians. This has been done because the resident physi- cians decided some time ago to advance their rates fifty per cent. —8oon after Prof. Milton Weatherby com- mitted suicide in Pittsburg Wednesday be- cause of financial worry it was learned that he was eligible for a $2,000 city job. The profesor had taken an examination for sec- retary of the civil service commission, and was rated so high that he might have receiv: ed the appointment bad be lived. —James Thompson,a young man employed by the Superior Coal & Coke company at its plant eaat of Latrobe, had a miraculous escape from death late Thursday afternoon, when he came in contact with an electric wire iu the mine, carrying s voltage of 1,000. As it was he had his head and face badly burned and suffered acutely from the shock. —Harry Butler, who was shot recently by Walter Rock,at Tomsontown Franklin conn. ty, the latter thinking him to be a burglar, died of his injuries in the Chambersburg hospital on Thursday night. Batler was an employe at the Frick company works in Waynesboro. He was 27 years old and is survived by his wife aud several small chil= dren. —Auto scorching in Cambrix’s eounty seat is rather expensive sport, as recently a Clear. field man who made a flying spin throngh the town had to pay $30 for his run, and two men from Johnstown ran a race which cost them $17.19 each. Two other Johnstown men will also be compelled to pay a penalty for fast running but the amount has not yet been fixed. i ~The members of the Clearfield council at a meeting on Mondny night passed an ordis nance granting a franchise to E. J. Brennan & Co., of Ridgway, for the furnishing of natural gas in that place. It is said the gas, which will be piped from wells in Elk coun- ty, will be furnished at a'saving to the peo- ple of Clearfield of $1 per thousand feet com= pared with the price of the manufactured product now in use. —A. H. Short, an employe of Shearer & company, lumber dealers, of which firm ex-Sheriff Torrence Shearer of Lock Haven, is a member, dropped dead while at work near Trout Run, Lycoming county, on Monday. The man had labored all day and did not complain of feeling ill. He was about to quit work for the day and was on top of a pile of lumber when he suddenly fell back ward from it to the ground and expired. He was aged about 57 years and is survived by his wife and three children. —J. H. Barton and four compauions set eel racks in Pine creek, near Blackwell, one night last week. When they took the racks up they landed 1,800 eels, weighing from one to five pounds each. Such » haul has never been made before in northern Pennsylvania. It is estimated by those who saw the catch that they would average two pounds each, the haul lacking only 400 pounds of being two tons. The same night it is estimated that 3,000 eels were taken {rom Pine creek, between Blackwells and Slate Runa distance of eleven miles. —Samuel Matter, a well-known trapper and hunter, recently trapped a large bear on the Sugar Valley mountain and decided to take Mr. Bruin home alive. After consider- able difficulty he succeeded in securing the bear in such a manner that he thought he would be safe from attack and be able to lead the animal to the intended destination. During the trip, however, bruin managed to get into close quarters with the hunter snd before the latter could get out of its reach the animal bit him on the leg, inflicting & painful wound. —Fifty-nine dogs fell victims to the rifle of Pete Brenizer, of Latrobe, on Wednesday. The dogs killed were in Unity township, Mr. Brenizer having spent the day in and around Beatty station. They were of all kinds and descriptions, ranging from the valuable Shepherd to the worthless mongrel. All were killed because their owners had failed to muzzle them in compliance with the quarantine which is now in force in Mt, Pleasant township alone, Mr. Brenizer and his assistants have killed 242 dogs within the past week. The majority of them belonged to foreigners, residing in the mining towns. BT an