| — Uncle SAM'S new ten dollar gold coin looks about as crude as the souvenir the street fakir sells on a firemen’s convention day. — Londoners used over twe billion gallons of water last year. What was not used for chasers we presume was necessary for do- mestic purposes. — Affinities are gradoally disappearing from the cold stoue steps and finding quar- ters more conducive to affinitizing around the parlor stove. —Everybody is happy except the fsllow with a lot of money to invest. The oppor- tunities are so many and returns so prom- ising that is is little wonder he is worried ahout which one to grasp. —Christmas isn’t so far off that ite per- plexing problems ean be kept ont of mind much longer. The million dollar heart with the ten dollar pooket hook is the one that will have the most trouble. —An automobile that will go either on land or wate: has been invented. There are some owners in Bellefonte who, at ¢imes, have been almost convinoed that the auto that will go at all anywhere has not yet been invented. —In the oase of the most recent New York flurry it is said that ‘‘others farnish- ed the cash while MORGAN gets the glory." We recall some other flurries over there where ‘others furnished the cash,’’ but it wasn't the glory MORGAN got then. He got the dough. —As a panio maker and a trust busting and nature fakir TEDDY is all right, but when it comes to furnishing the ideas for pew government oonins ; well, that takes an artistic nature that isn’t dominant with a six shooter in each band and a howie knife between its teeth. —Messrs. CHUTZ AULL and BILL Stu- ART have just given five thousand dollars for a swimming tank for the new ashletio houve at State College. Knowing the two worthies as we do weare constrained to re- mark that ere long their maunificent gift will he known as the oil tank. —The heavy importations of foreign gold, fitty-one million dollars wishin the last two weeks, tell the tale of where the wheat and cotton orops are going. We must feed and clothe the world this year and when the world is biddiog for food and raiment we must understand that prices are going to be high. ~The ministers of the land are stirring up quite a mess over the fact that “In God We Trust'’ has been left off the new gold coins recently minted. Just why ib was lett off no one seems to know more thao that Mr. RoosevELT desired it. If TEDDY expects the people to trust in him he'll have to brace up considerable aud be one thing or the other. This game of woh- ble that he has been playing won't do. —When Congress meets next month it will probably have a plethora of financial bills to consider. The present trouble is always uppermost in the American mind. It rarely goes deep enough for cause; being frenzied hy the effect. The most beneficens thing Congress could do would be to modi- ty the tariff laws so that it would be impos. sible to extort hundreds of millions of dol. lars from the people only to keep them locked ap and out of nee in government depositories. —The courts of Mississippi have just de- cided that ‘Go to heill”’ is not profanity. It seems to us that such a conclusion should uot bave worried the legal mind very greatly. Of coarse is isn’t profanity, bat it is a decidedly inelegant expression, coarse and offevsive ; indicating lack of gentility in ite user and naually a short vo- oabulary. But, withal, there are times when pent up feelings seem to find no oth- er satisfactory avenue of escape than throngh it or the word ‘‘damn.” —The decisive progress of the prohibition and local option movement bas brought the brewing and distilling interests of the country to a realization of the fact thas their millions and millions of dollars worth of property may be made worthless ina twinkling. And we vote with pleasare that they are already organizing to reform the traflic in their products. The liquor peo- ple cannot hope to satisfy the Tewperance people with anything elee than permavens and complete elimination of the traffic the world over, but they can take much of the ammunition away from the prohibi- tionists and local option advocates hy themselves insisting that retailers he more careful in dispensing the stuff and give less offense aud fewer infractions of the law. —It is certainly a source of great sasis- faction to note that while banks in many other parts of the country have heen com- pelled to resort to issuing sundry kinds of gorip and in most instances curtail the cashing of checks to items of less than five dollars th: three Bellefonte institutions have moved right along with their nsnal methods of doing business. They have plenty of currency for the needs of the community and there is no danger of Belle. fonte going onto a sorip basis like so many of its neighbors. However, a scrip basis peed oanse no one alarm, for under the sys- tem adopted for its issuance it is based purely on bonds that the government au- thorized for an issnavce of currency so there is really no difference in its value representation, whether it should be print- ed in Bellefonte or Washington. VOL. 52 sMalefaciors of Great Wealth," In 1904 Joux D ROCKERFELLER, H. | STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. & BELLEFONTE, PA., NOVEMBER 15, 1907. Consternation tu the Machine. The Republican machine has been H. Rockers, J. PierroNT MORGAN, E. H. | thrown into something like a state of con- HARRIMAN and other ‘‘malefactors of great | wealth,” invested their own and other peo- | Mercantile ple’s money in a corruption fund to be | used to bribe voters to support THEODORE | It in not cer- | is considered among the choicest plums on RooseveLT for President. steroation by a shake-up in the Board of Appraisers in Philadelphia. The Board consists of five members and the office, with a salary of $6,000 a year, tain that they contributed cheerfully or | the tree. The law provides for minority acted willingly. But THEODORE ROOSE- | representation but in Philadelphia that is VELT having taken his Secretary of Com: | usually a meaningless term and the major- merce and Labor out of the cabinet and made him chairman of the Repablican National committee, they bad no alterna- tive. As Secretary of Commerce and La- bor, with access to all their books, he had them between the upper and nether mill stones aud conld grind them to his heart's coutent or squeeze thew to the satiety of his malice. He knew of their orimes and un- derstood the peril in which they lived. Messrs. ROOKERFELLER, MORGAN, HAR- RIMAN, RoaErs and the other ‘‘malefac- tors of great wealth,’ are not pleased with the policies which THEODORE ROOSEVELT has adopted since his election as the result of their contributions to their own and oth- er people’s money to the CORTELYOU cor- raption fund. Ina previous message Mr. ROOSEVELT has said that ‘in dealing with business interests, for the goverumens to undertake by crude aod ill-considered leg- islation to do what way turn ous to be bad would be to oar the risk of such] far- reaching national disaster that it would be preferable to undertake votbing as all.” The gentlemen named accepted that deols- ration as the real sentiments of the Presi- dent and, thinking bim a sale man for their purposes, bought his election from the ven- al voters of the country. Messrs. ROCK ERFELLER, MORGAN, HAR. RIMAN, ROGERS aud the other ‘‘malefac- tors of great wealth” would like to bave popular sympathy because they have been cheated in their corrupt deal with Mr. CORTELYOU in the interests of THEODORE RooSEVELT. So far as we are concerned we would like to sympathize, or at least condole with them. They bave been cheated beyond questivn, CORTELYOUjab- stracted sheir own and other people’sjmon- ey from shew under palpably false pre- teuces. But it is atterly impossible, for us to either condele or sympathize. There is a principle of law that if a man engaged in the perpetration of a felony comuwits war- der, he is guilty of the higher crime, though Le bad no intention to commit it. The tarpitude of the real purpose carries or involves the penalty of the other crime. The “malefacturs of great wealth'’ are probably suffe.ing immensely on account of the absurd actions of the man whom they elected to the great office of Presi- dent by crimival piooesses. Bat that is their owo affair and il the grilling coutin- ues uutil they sre impoverished or impris- oned, we shall enter no protest. They “sowed to the wind’’ and have a right ‘‘to reap the whirlwind.” They sacrificed every priuveciple of patriotism aod jostioe iu corrupting the electorate of the country in order to perpetuate the control of the Republican party and coutinue their own frauchises to graft. Let them suffer uow all that the law allows. They have never beens ‘‘desirable oitizens.’”” They bave always been grafters and if shey quarrel in the division of she spoils it ia sheir affair. The Grafters “aster” in Mind. The capitol grafters are perceptibly ‘‘easier’’ in mind since the election. It may be said that shey never were in very serious fear of conviction. Their cvnfidence in the wuccess of the Republican machine campaigu for she recovery of complete con- trol of the state povernmeunt influenced them to waive a number of techniosl ad- vantages in setting a time for trial. Since the election, however, they have thrown off all disguise. They sneer as even the suggestion of conviction. They literally laugh at the law. Of course those oriminal conspirators understand that shey will he put on trial and probably at the time set upon agree- ment between conusel for the State and the acoused. SAMUEL SALTER underssood that he would have to stand trial when he sarrendered to the authorities after the eleotion of the *‘unspeakable’’ JORN WEA- VER to the office of Distrios Attorney of Philadelphia. Bat he understood that the trial would be in a friendly court by a *‘fix- ed’ jury and shat bis acquittal had been absolutely agreed upon in advance. The capitol gratters have precisely the same understanding. They have arravged for a mistrial. The capitol grafters were more deeply concerned in the resnit of the election than any other residents of the State and they contributed most liberally to the campaign fand. They rexlized shat she election of JOHN G. HARMAN to the office of State Treasurer meant to them penal servitude and to the State she elimination of grals. It is small wonder that they were earnest supporters of SHEATZ and shat they secur- ed the services of the venal press, at the price of large sums and self stoltification. Their personal liberty was involved. ity of four to one wakes the minority mem- her a pecaliarly helpless entity. Hitherto the machine has worked it to the limit, With HesrY C. Raxsney, HENRY J. | TRAINER, E. A. DEVLIN and JouN B. LUKINS composing the majority it is safe to say that nothing got away. The appointment of the hoard ix a joint prerogative of the Auditor General of the State and the City Treasurer of Philadel. phia. The head and front of the PENROSE opposition in the city is Mr. E. A. Van: VALKENBURG, editor of the Philadelphia North American. That geutleman aspires to control the policies and organization of the party and with that purpose in view hopes to succeed PENROSE, if not in the Senate, at least iu the management of the party. In furtherance of his scheme he had Rosgrt K. YOUNG uominated as the Republican candidate for Auditor General lass year. Sabsequently he attempted to use Mr. YOUNG as a club to enloroe the re sirement of Colonel WESLEY R. ANDREWS as shairman of the State Committee. In this he failed and almost made a bad mess of is. In the appointment of mercantile ap- praiser for Philadelphia the other day, Mr. YOUNG selected a« hie personal representa- sive on the hoard, Mr. F. E. VAN VALK- ENBURG, brother of the ambitious editor. With this entering wedge it is expected that a big split in the machine organiza- tion will be accomplished. After the first Monday in May, next year, Aunditor Gen- eral Young and State Treasurer-eleot SHEATZ will constitute a majority of the revenae commissioners who levy the taxes on corporations. SHEATZ is under pledge to VAN VALKENBURG to join in the oppo- sition to PENROSE and with that influence and what can be extracted from the shake. up in the Board of Mercantile Appraisers, the chances are that & formidable opposi- tion to PENROSE can he created. There is no certainty as to the attitude of Mr. SHEATZ in the matter, however. The friends of PENROSE declare that Mr. YouNG was nnder pledge to aid the organ- ization in the use of the patronage of his office and it is known that Mr. SHEATZ bas ‘‘been bonded to the limit’ in the same way. He worked both ends against the middle during the campaign and will be forced to break faith with one side or the other. If he finally determines to go along with YOUNG in fulfilling the duties of wembership in the Board of Revenue Commissioners it is safe to predios, not only the defeat of PENROSE but his com- plete elimination from the party organiza- tion. VAN VALKENBURG is after him. Sheatz and the Veterans. There is little, if any, evidence that the veterans of the Civil war voted with any degree ol unanimity against Joux O. SHEATZ for State Treasurer. They had every reason to vote against him as a unit. He defeated the pension bill which would have given a moity to each of them and it may be assumed that he was influenced to his opposition to the measure because he wanted to have a big surplos in the treas- ary for nse after his election. But the old soldiers are credulons folk, it appears. They accept any excuse for adhering to the Republican machine. They, or at least some of them even think that the Republi- can machine pays them the pensions they get. The pension question was not made an issue of the campaign by the emoviasic organization. The veterans themselves took it up and urged their comrades to re- sent a palpable aod deliberate injury. The comrades seemed to respond freely and the oasual observer might easily have imagined shat the votes of the Veterans and Sous of Veterans would have been practically solid against the man re- sponsible for their disappointment. Bat the vote indicates no such result. The veterans and their sons voted as usual. They cherished she foot that kicked them. They voted for the man who deprived them of a trifle which might have been paid and not missed. The Republican machive promised them a pension bill in the future and probably that satisfied the veterans. The Repubii- can machine is prolific in promises and resourceful in pledges. Bat the truth is that the on bill, which was vetoed because Mr. SHEATZ convinced the Gov- ernor that the revenues were inadequate to meet is, was as lair and just a measure as can be prepared. Besides there is plenty of money, or wil eh rian to pay every pension . In would have been a dangerously large and mischievous surplus in the treasury after the pensions bad been paid if the CoonraN 2 Palpable Poittical Defanit. nm Even a oursory analysis of the election returns makes one significant fact entirely plain. It is that the defeat of the splen- | Jue ward are shure whocoin she mistor. did candidate of the Democratic party for | State Treasurer, Hw. JoHN G. HARMAN, was the result of Democratic defaals. The absent vote would bave given him an over- whelming majority and so crippled the republican wachine as to make it harmless for many vears to come. confined to no particular section, moreover, | It i= notable al! over the State though a rifle more acoeutnated in the districts ous- side of the swo great oities, Philadelphia and Pitisharg. The Democratic vote was larger in both those cities and the Republi- ean majority less than last year. That being trae responsibility for the miscarriage of she eleosion this year is as- eribable in the main to Democratic de- lingueney in the rural communities and principally among she farmers. Ol course there are extennating circumstances. Help on the farm is hard to get and in some seo- tions absolately impossible and the farmer whose crops are out likely feels that his first and most important duty is to look after such things. Election day was fine for farm work and farmers who had a con- siderable distavce to go to the polls were naturally reluctant to sacrifice the time necessary. But in the default they made a greater saoritice. They neglected a civio obligation of vast magnitude. : If WiLLiam H. BERRY badn’t been elected State Treasurer two years ago, $25,000,000 would bave been stolen from the resources of the State in the construo- tion and equipment of the capitol within the period of a few years. That equals more to each farmer than he saved by husk. ing corn on election day instead of goivg to the election. Not only that but the failure to vote involves consent to the political immorality which is rapidly making the State of Pennsylvania a reproach to the citigenship of the ooantry. The Grangers aod farmers in other organizations com- plain of injustice in the administration of the government but if they fail to vote they bave themeelves to hlame. Roosevelt's Personal Satisfaction. ” a : In a sort of semi official proclamation President ROOSEVELT hus expressed bis personal satisfaction with the results of the election. No other President ever went 80 far in partisanship but no other Presi dent ever personally bargained with male- factors to raise funds to bribe voters in kis interests, ‘‘Takiog one consideration with the other,’ as the comic opera writer put it, there are no reasons for surprise that ROOSEVELT has done so unseemly a shing. But it is vot casy to conjecture what particular feature of the election results so de-light-ed onr ‘‘rain-in-the-iace’’ exeon- tive. It could hardly have been the almost obliteration of the Republican majority in New Jersey because of the avowed opposi- tion of the better element ol the citizen. ship of that State to bis ahsurd policies. The election of Tom JOHNSON to the office of Mayor of Cleveland, Ohio, by a majority largely increased on account of ROOSE- VELT'S support of the other candidate, was not likely the reason for his satisfaction either. Then what was it? Probably the restoration of the PENROSE machine to compiete control in Penusyiva- nia inflaenced him to his rejoicing. It is known that PENROSE has agreed to saori- fice his senatorial colleagne, Mr. KNOX, in the interest of a third term for ROOSEVELT and onr presidential . hoodler discerns in the PENROSE control of the Peunsylvania treasury vast opportunities for collecting campaign corruption funds. ROOSEVELT lias no greater reason for rejoicing. February Election Primaries, The county commissioners have decided that the primaries for the nomination of candidates for borongh and township offices | to he voted for at the February election shall be held this year as in the past, and not under the rules of the New Primaries law. Ip counties like Centre it is discre. tionary with the county commissioners as to how the spring primaries shall be beld, though the primaries for the general fall election must be held according to the new law. And inasmuch as the Auditor Gen- eral has intimated that the State would not stand the expense for counties like Centre holding the spring primaries in ac- cordance with the late Act of Assembly the commissioners do not care to sake the responsibility of going to the hig expense thus entailed aud then be compelled to pay it out of the county treasury. So bor- oogh and township chairmen and election officers as well as prospective candidates should bear in mind that nominations will be made as heretofore at primaries held the latter part of January. ! ——What a big crop of stories will he garnered in the next two weeks. Bat of course there will have tobeas itis a long time until the fishing season opens, with bill bad been signed and SHEATZ is re- sponaible for the veto. i months of dreary winter evenings in the meantime. Jo. Financial Bazzards. From the Altoona Times. The moss contemptible class of people in profit. The world is full of human vultures who are ever on the alert to take advantage of sita- ations that afford them the opportunity of preying upon those who are temporarily de- fenseless. Sometimes they take the of brutal thogs, like the horde of erimivals who robbed corpses at San Francisco alter The defauls is the city bad been laid waste by a dreadful calamity; another time pose as finan- ciers like those in Wall street to-day who are retarding a solution of the financial dif- ficulisy. The only difference between the two olasses is that in San Francisco they were summarily shot down by the soldiery, while in New York they were pointed to as shrewd speculators and held np as an ex- ample for the youth of our conutry tostrive to emulate. k As the moment when the financial mar- ety un to emerge (rom the pauio pre- oipitated by the sanipulations of dtkersp- ulous speculators, a blers on the New Yo hn me started to corner contracts for December delivery of the produot, and so successful have they been shat they threaten to sheck completely the exports of coston from the United States and out off the most substan. tial source of relie! for the monetary stringency that has been ailing in all seotions of the conntry. Unless the corner is broken, it is feared that the usual cotton movement of this season of the year will be completely reversed and instead of build- ing ap a substantial credit in Europe u whioh to base gold imports, New York bankers will be Hod to arrange for repay- wens for the enormous amount of she sta- ple that was sold months ago to Europe spinners. Tbe uoprincipied crowd of manipulators who have set ves down toa busz- zard's [least think listle of the ts of their ghoulish schemes and care less. What matters it to them if business is pasalyzed, entailing embarrassment to thousande bonest business men and fnauciers and widespread distress to millious of the mas- ses ? Patriotism is to them a meaningless term. Their sense of duty to mankind is measored by the dollar-mark. They see no iarthet bun their Swelling beak ZSosount and will stoop to ap tor their dreams of avarice. y : This olass of individuals are largely re sponsible for the recent orisis. Manipula- tors attempted to corner the copper market with other people’s money and failed. When every honest man in the country is doing bis level best to repair the they have done, another gang of ghouls compelled to devote I to Wall street methods. War, pestilence, tamine or misfortune —whatever ill besides the nation—find the carrion birds of finance ready for a feast. a_i A Beggar on Horse back. From the Pitsburg Post, The Honorable George Barnsdall Cox, of Cincinnati, isa statesman after theap- proved Pennsylvania machine stripe, who 1s somewhat out of bis element in the ris tug tide of political independence in the Buckeye State. If Mr. Cox continues to hold so the views be expressed in a New York interview Satarday he will soon be oat of power again, too. Mr. Cox was snowed under in Cincinnati two years ago, when the State responded to Taft's devan- ciation of his hosism by putting into office an opposition which has failed to wake good wish the Philadelphia-like peo- ple of Cincinnati. A very little decent administration is too much apparently for the sodden citizen. ship of these two degraded municipaiities, and the Cox gang bas just been retnined to power. much as Philadelphia returned to her civic vileness last spring. Mr. Cox lay« the flattering unetion to his soul that bis local snecess and the defeat of the Tafs- Burton-administration forces in other parts of Ohio presage the rivival of the Cox-For- aker Dick regime in the State. [tis in- conceivable to a statesman of the Cox type that the overthrow of one rival organiza- tion means anything else shan the exalting of the other. He cannot see that the peo- ple of his State are in revolt against both cligunes of selfish, corrupt partisans. In Toledo the last ten years the ma- | chiniste of both political parties have heen uniformly whipped every time they have | contested for domination on loonl issues, Apd Tom Johneon, whois invincible on local issues in Cleveland, has had but lis. tie more than normal part when he tried to enter larger fields. Mr. Cox cannot see that voters are learning to dis- ‘ eriminate very clearly, and that he and his | bunch of self-seeking lenders are likely to | get their humps just as hard whenever the | people can get a good orack at them. Cin- -cinnati is now the cancerons spot on the Onio body politic, juss as Philadelphia is in this State. Only in Ghio this pathologi- oa! condition of politics is better appreoia- ted than it is yet in Pennsylvania. As Seen trom Outside. From the Springfield Republican. The regular Republican strength was maintained in the Pennsylvania and Ne- braska elections for minor state offices. reform blioans had returned to the told in the Keystone state, and a candidate for state treasurer agreeable to them had been nominated. It is a peculiar fact thas the proof of the extensive and infamous frauds in building the new state spies as Harrisharg, which had heen publ by the investigating committee within the past year, bad no effect npon this year’s voting. The State, in going Democratic two years ago, appeared to punish the dominant party for orimes in ater frat but now that the orimes are efinitely found out and confessed the again revels in its old time plaralities. ——Real fall weather is the kind we have been having all of this week. gs up and hinders the of The people of Upite States; Stuer or or later, for irom oer tin, will 3 attention 3 a A A 1 STA BTR SAO Spawils from the Keystone. ~The school board of Oil City is perplexed over the attendance at school of a Chinese student. It is claimed by some that he is only 18 years of age while others declare he is about 25, and should not be permitted to mingle with the young children. ~Thomas Pearson, aged 51 years, appeared at the office of register DeHaas in Clearfield Thursday morning and asked for 2 license to wed Mrs. Dorothy Buckley, widow aged 79 years. He has been a widower two years and the bride-to-be has been a widow since 1886, ~Joseph E. Thropp, of Everett, has just consummated a big coal land deal in the Broad Top region, having purchased 2.800 acres from the Peabody estate. These will, it is suid, make close to 5,000 acres of land, upon which there are 400 coke ovens, owned by Mr. Thropp. ~—Suffering a fit of remorse after a pro- longed spree, John Muric, of South Bethle- hem, on Thursday attempted to end his life with a rope, a gun, a ragor, a koife and by butting out his brains, but was frustrated in every attempt, when he gave up further at- tempts to end hi« career. ~The Jersey Shore Patriotic Order Sons of America have donated to the school of the Third ward, twenty-four beautiful silk flags, for the purpose of adorning the interior of the school rooms, as well as to instill patriot. ism into the hearts of the boys and girls who attend the public schools. ~Thomas McLaughlin, of Bryn Mawr, near Philadelphia, had been suffering for years from frequent sharp twinges about the knee which he attributed to rheumatism, until Thureday, when a surgeon took from his knee a needle that bad been imbedded there sixteen years ago, when he was a boy. —William N. Getty, known as “Buster’’ Getty on many of the leading race tracks, died penniless oun Sunday at the home of a friend in Pittsburg, from the excessive use of drugs, at the age of 39 years. Getty spent three fortunes aggregating $300,000 and the last year had been working as a porter about hotels. —A panic was created in Hogeutogler's laundry, Harrisburg, on Wednesday, by the collapse of » water tank on the roof of the building containing 30,000 gallons of water. The roof was crushed in and of the thirty girls in the establishment several were hurt by falling debris and several jumped out of the windows. —Millivns of tons of anthracite conl are to be exposed to the miners’ picks as the result of | of an agreement just made between W. H. Reenfield, of Philadelphia and the Big Creek Coal company, granting the latter the right tomine a tract of 239 acres in Schuylkill township, Schuylkill conuty. The lease is for thirty years. —It has just been discovered that the Penusylvania and the Lehigh Valley rail- roads, about Hazleton, have been systemat- jeally robbed of thousands of dolims worth of iron and brass by junk dealers. Cars left standing on sidings are robbed of brake shoes and brass journals are removed where pussible. Detectives are looking out for the thieves. house in Reading on Wednesday for a Bible printed in 1569 and containing the family tecord of the Bertolet family for more than 300 yeArs. A controversy arose as to its owhership in the settlement of an estate and Judge Bland ordered it to be sold at. public sale. It was started at $10 and was knocked down to Miss Strub Bertolet at $185. —Exeavators for a new state road in Cam. berland township, Adams county, struck a fine vein of excellent con! about pine feet in depth and only about a foot beneath the sur- face, for a distance of about 2 mile. It had Joug been noticed that after « heavy 1ain the flowing water in the loeality became black, but no one thought that coal existed there aud the discovery has created con-iderable excitement. —At a meoting of the official board of Pine street Methodist Episcopal church of Wil- linmsport, held Tuesday evening, Thanks- giving duy, November 28th, was fixed as the date upon which the cormer stone for the new ehurch now building will be laid. The exercises will be held at 10 o'clock a. m. of that day. In connection with the service the usu! union Thanksgiving day services of the Methodists will be held. —Miss Nannie Magill, the 15.year-old daughter of Edward Magill, of Gray's Run, Lycoming county, had an almost miraculous escape from instant death by shooting while visiting at the home of her grandfather, George Shires, at Cascade, Monday evening. A gun in the bands of her uncle was acei- dentally discharged and the bullet glanced across girl's forehead, cutting open the skin but inflicting no serious wound. —At Renovo, Clinton county, Tuesday afternoon Albert Reisdorf was shot in the back with a heavy charge from a shot gun held by John Homan. They were hunting rabbits below the town when = rabbit jump- ed up in front of them and Reisdorf got in front of Homan's gun, receiving the full charge close to one of bis hips. The bowels aud lower portion of the abdomen were terri bly torn and death soon relieved his suffer ings. —James Handran, who during the past three or four months had been in the employ of Swift & Co., in Philipsburg, as solicitor and collector and who resigned his position ouly about ten days ago, died at noon on Saturday at the Central hotel in Houtedale, after an illness of about a week wiih poeu- moni, aged 28 years. The home of the de- The | ceased was Troy, N. Y., but he had been a clerk in Houtzdale for about four years prior to going to Philipsburg. —Quite an excitement was created in the Clairndon hotel at Mapleton, Huntingdon county, on Thursday night about 8 o'clock when the generator of the acetylene gas plant in the basement exploded, Frank Quinta, a young Italian, who was left in charge of the generator for the night,thought- lessly carried a lighted candle into the apart- ment and holding it close to the engive, caused the explosion. The plant was badly wrecked and a portion of the generator was driven throught the porch roof. Several per- sons were on the porch but no one was in jured. Quinta was severely injured. BE WAS A livehy eontestin. (he-COUFt.