Demo item, BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. ~The voice of spring ie so hoarse now that its song bas ceased entirely. ~The BERRY season is over in the state treasury field and they say the pickin’s were poor. ~The returns from Texas indicate that Jor BAILEY is still ‘‘some pumpkins’ in the Lone Star State. —The open pulpit in the Episcopal church is only open so far as Episcopal talkers are concerned. —With two electric theatres in town there ought to be enough to divert the minds of the unemployed. —BRYAN bas captured Ohio and Tarr bas secured the endorsement of Connecticut. Thus the leaders get further in the lead. —It is said that brains are preferred to wealth in New York society. How natural for people to want most what they bave least of. —A Chicago woman doctor declares that she saw souls leave two hodies. My, what are women coming to in their race to out- strip the men. —This will be positively the last issue of the WATCHMAN that a number of old read- ers will receive unless they answer our last letter before next Friday. —Tyrone council having appointed the committee to aot for that town the proposed PRUNER orphanage is another step toward t he place where something 1s to be done. —The motto of the new National Pros- perity association is ‘‘Give us a Rest and Sunshine.” Strange, we bad always as- sociated that sentiment with the corner loafer class, —Breathitt county, Kentucky, is minus one more feudist. On Tuesday someone stabbed sheriff Ep. COLLAHAN to death then the sherifl’s son shot the stabber. So it goes in Kentucky. —The QUAY statue is completed and now the question is as to where to put it. Surely the capitol nor the capitol grounds will not be desecrated with an effigy of such a political corruptionist ? ——Though May was ushered in with snow and a few flakes of the beautiful fell for several days, we are likely to have the real thing in spring weather before Memo- riai day, #o don’t get discouraged. —The general conference of the Metho- dist charch is just now engaged in dis- cussing the matter of worldly amusements, Ping-pong, tiddledy-winks, five hundred and grab bags will probably be put on the free list, — It some of the Pennsylvania Democrats would get hall as busy on ‘‘BRYAN’S strength’’ alter he is nominated as they are now the party vote in this State would probably show results more to their credit than it usually does. —*“The full dinner pail” will probably have no place in the presidential campaign of next fall. At least those who talked most of it fonr years ago will not be so bandy at waving it from every political stamp in the country. —MAXINE ELLIOTT is plavning to es- tablish an ideal theatre in New York. Just what the lady has in mind has not heen made public but it is a safe guess that part of the idealism will be to make herself a “‘head-liver’ all she time, —Uncle JosgPH CANNON [ound ous on Tuesday that there are times when some Congressmen own, express and back an opinion. His determined effort to drive them to the support of the VREELAND currenoy bill met with signal failare. ~—Swarthmore college has expelled a quartet of the best athletes in the instito. tion for stealing pies from the college pan- try. Can it be possible, after ali, that Swarthmore is getting ready to reconsider the refusal of the Mrs. JEANES millions. — Last fall EDWARD H. HARRIMAN was the scape-goat of all she financial swindles in the country. Now the speculators who were so busy blaming their troubles on him are proclaiming him the Moses who is leading the country out of the financial wilderness, —The President conversed in German, French, Italian and Dutob with visitors representing all those nationalities on Tues- day. Of course they were delighted to find our President so versatile. But, hash ! don't tell them that talking is his principal ae- complishment. —~HETTY GREEN has given up a nine- teen dollar a month flat to take op her ahode in a thirty-two dollar a day suite in New York's most expensive hotel. HerTY always was so eccentric that no one will ever know whether this move is for comfort or for curiosity. —What has Congressman BARCLAY done for this district since he has been its Representative in Congress. Can anyone point to a single official aot of his that has benefited his constituents. A rich man is no recommendation. Why not put a man who does things there and send W. HaARr- RI1S0ON WALKER to represent us. —8ome one in the lower end of Bucks county wants a concrete wall built some. where by someone so that the northwest winds that eweep over Pennsylvania from October to June might be broken up. He claims that it would give them ‘‘a sooner summer’ in Bucks county. How nice ‘“‘a sooner summer’’ would be, but we’ll bet this chap would sooner let summer be as it is than build the concrete wind-brake. yoL. 33. Imposing on Old Soldiers. The platform adopted by the Republi- can state convention in Harrishurg, last week, has maoy curious features, but it contains nothing more remarkable, as an expression of ‘‘nerve,” than the last olanse. ‘‘We again acknowledge the na- tion's everlasting debt of gratitude to ite heroic soldiers, and sailors,”’ it declares, “'and express our approval of the action of Congress in the passage of the Act of Feb- ruary 6, 1907, for their increased relief and the Act of April 19, 1908, extending the class and increasing the pension of wid- ows." Concerning the Act of February 6, 1907, we have little information except that it passed both Houses by a unamimous vote, was in no sense partisan and is universally approved by the people. With respect to the Act of April 19, 1908, however, we have some inside history. That bill was originally intre duced by Hoo. WILLIAM B. WILSON, the superb Democratic Repre- sentative from the Fifteenth district of Pennsylvania. It was the intention of the committee to pigeon-hole it, when the Democratic members made such a disturb- ance that that plan was abandoned as dangerons, Then the committee made some trifling obanges in the phrasing and reported it, not as Mr, WILSON'S bill, but as a committee bill. This was to deprive a Democrat of the authorship of so popular | A measure. Even at that the intention was io stifle the measare, the plan being to*‘lose’’ it in the Senate. The Senate refused to take this responsibility, however, and though the measure made slow progress it passed finally in Maroh avd was committed to conference, This afforded an opportunity for the strangliog process and the Repub- lican managers of the House determined to name no conferees and thus let it die of neglect. More than a month passed be- fore this trick was discovered and then the Democratic members threatened an expos- ure unless the measure was given fair treat. ment. This forced the Speaker finally to name managers on the pars of the House and the bill became the subject of con- ference. The process was drawn out as long as possible but finally a compromise was reached on the Senate amendments. With this record of treachery and bad faith as a basis, however, the Republican State convention has undertaken to impose on the credulity of the old soldiers with a hypooritical profession of friend-ship. | As a matter of fact the Republican man- agers of Congress didn’t intend to pass the windows’ pension bill. They prefer to ap- propriate the money for battleships and distribute it among favorite contractors for public buildings and other uses in which there ie a larger proportion of graft. Old soldiers should nuderstand this. Mr. Habgood's Services and Reward. Some of our esteemed Republican ocon- temporaries are sedulously trying to create the impression that the honor of an election as delegate-at-large was hestowed on Rep- resentative RoBerT P. HABGooD, of Me- Kean connty, because of an acs of self abne- gation iu connection with the presidential candidacy of Senator KNoX. When Hab. GOOD was eleoted president of the Pennayl- vania League of Republican clubs, the story goes, the manager of the TAFT cam- paign wrote him a flattering letter solicting his support of the ponderons Secretary of War. [Instead of proposing terms, as he might bave foolishly done, HABGOOD wrote that Pennsylvania has a candidate to whom the allegiance of all Penuvsylva- niavs is doe. That story is interesting mainly besause it is so absolutely without foundation in fact. The TAFT manager may have written as stated, and Mr. HABGOOD may have re- plied in the language ascribed to him in the colamus of our too credulous Republi- can contemporaries. Indeed it would have been a sign of hopeless insanity * if he had answered in any other way. At the time Senator KNOX was being used as a ‘‘decoy duck’ to begnile a iot of wavering inde: pendents into the machine camp in order to prevent the election of Hon. Jonw G. HARMAN to the office of State Treasurer. The answer of Mr. HABGOOD to the sugges- tion of Mr. Vorys, therefore, may be re- garded as a part of the general plan. But the compliment bestowed apon him by the Machioe State couvention was not in the nature of a reward for that answer. It was for a vastly more substantial party service, It was for suppressing, last winter, the evidence of one of the most outrageous cases of graft which has ever heen pulled off in Pennsylvania. The conspiracy which resulted in increasing the price of the Legislative Record from less than $3 to more than $12 a page, coming on the heels of the exposures in the capitol building frande, would have been disas- trous and HaBGOOD prevented the exposure by ng the evidence which was forced upon bim ie abundance. That is why he has since been so highly honored. —Subsoribe for the WATCHMAN. BELLEFONTE, Plraileal Craft in Trouble, The esteemed Philadelphia Record ie baving all sorts of trouble with itself. It is trying to reconcile ita blind and unreas- oning worship of ROOSEVELT with its daty as an honest purveyor of news exponent of Democracy and the inconsistency is so great as to make it a subject of ridicule. In a single issue recently, for example, it contains an absurd cartoon representing ROOSEVELT in heoric proportions as the champion of public opinion, an obviously fake dispatch from Pittsburg giving an i account of a marvelous hoom in industrial life and an editorial paragraph refering to | the idle cars and locomotives in the vards of the Pennsylvania railroad. The latter is the expression, probably, of the honest and intelligent editorial department and the cartoon and fake news item the impulse of the ROOSEVELT mania in control. The trath is that there is a conspiracy to deceive the public as to the induastrial and commercial conditions of the country and the Philadelphia Record is among the conspicuous participants. The object of conspiracy is to continue the ROOSEVELT control of the federal government and | policies by the election of his political leg- | atee, Sesretary TAFT. The most certain | way to achieve this result is to create the opinion in the public mind that the present | industrial paralysis is an imaginary condi- tion. That there was a brief business slump daring the late fall and early winter is admitted. Bot itis claimed that the cagacions management of ROOSEVELT and his associates in the present administration instantly grappled with the adverse condi- tions and conquered them and that now the country is bounding away on the crest of a tidal wave of industrial and commer cial activity and prosperity. It is all right for the esteemed Philadel- phia Record to practice this deception in the open. Ifit will withdraw its pretense of representing Democracy and like any other pirate raise the black flag, we shall make no complaint of ite recreancy. Bat we do protest against the false pretense expressed in this persistent and insistent laudation of ROOSEVELT'S policies as an oracle of Democracy. There are’ not now and never have Leen public policies as diametrically opposite to the principles of JEFFERSON as those claimed to be the policies of ROOSEVELT. What he has not stolen from the Populist he bas inherited from the Federalists and we protest against the laudation of such heresies in the name of Democracy. Demoorats shonid unite in protest io the only way that is effective, They should refuse to pay for such rubbish. Proper Solution of a Problem, Aocording to authentic information whioh comes from Luzerne county there is a probability that Hon. JOHN T. LENAHAN may yet consent to a re-eleotion to Con- gress. Two vears ago Mr. LENAHAN was elected by a plurality of 6,549 over his leading ccmpetitor and a safe majority over all other candidates though the Socialist candidates received 5,197 votes. Bat congressional service dida’t appeal to him. He revealed a splendid capacity for the work and soon won the highest respect of the leading lawyers in the body on ac- count of his mastery of legal problems and splendid erudition. Bat his heart was in the courts at home and he declined to offer himself for re-election. Mr. LENAHAN'S Democratia associates on the floor, not only from Penusylvania but from all parts of the country, tried to diesnade him from his determination on | this subject but without effects. The time limit for announcement fixed by lew ex- pired, and though the field was left open to him and he was importuned by friends and neighbors, he made no aunouncement and another competent man was chosen. But the rank and file of the party is dis- satisfied and 1t is now eaid that the nomi- nee expresses a desire to withdraw on con- dition that Mr. LENAHAN will accept the nomination to fill the vacancy. We un. derstand that be is very much disinclined to yield but the pressure is heing made so strong that he may be obliged to. It is not invidious to say that we hope that the problem will be solved in that way. No doubt the nominee is eminently fis and entirely capable and that his eleo- tion would guarantee the constituency splendid service. But LENAHAN'S elec- tion would be absolutely certain and as it is practically admitted that the next Con- gress will be Democratic there will te great need for strong men and LENAHAN would be a tower of strength to the new Speaker. He is able, eloquent and always ready in debate and bis legal attainments especially fit him for the work that will be required during the next Congress. We hope, therefore that be will consent to ran and feel certain of the result. ~The Free Meshodist quarterly meet- ing whioh was held in the cours house, this place, from Thursday evening of last week until Sanday was quite largely attended and drew very fair audiences at eviry meet- ing. “STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. PA., MAY 8, 1908. i — ‘The Corruption Fand Controls. JonN SHARP WILLIAMS, the magnificent leader of the Democratic minority in the House of Representatives at Washington, gave the Republicans of that body a ‘‘bad quarter of an hour,’’ the other day. Hav- ing been graciously allowed fifteen minutes to discuss, on the part of the minority, an important pending measure, Mr. WiL- LIAMS properly made a joke of the affair. It would have required hours to properly present the minority views on the sabject and fifteen minates would hardly bave heen sufficient time to state the case. So instead of attemptiog an impossibility he presented a petition to the Speaker asking that some member be recognized to move the passage of one of the many bills on the calendar putting wood pulp and white paper on the free list. There are 166 Demooratic members of the House and Mr. WILLIAMS showed that the petition whioh he held was signed by 162 of them, the other four being absent. Thirty Republicans added to the signers would have made a majority and to facili tate the consummation Mr. WILLIAMS had a table, pens, ink and blotters placed in the aisle in front of the Bpeaker's desk. Then he implored the Republicans who pretend to favor the measure to come for- ward and sign. ‘‘It should be easy to get the thirty,” Mr. WILLIAMS observed, ‘‘be- cause almost that many Republicans have introdneed free paper bills, and I know,” he continued, ironically, ‘‘that every one of you who introduced a hill meant what you said.”’ But there was no response. The bonds securely held’ the servile slaves, The President has insisted on the passage of the proposed legislation but Speaker CANNON, DALZELL and PAYNE are under agreements to the Paper trust to give it at least ‘‘another year of good stealing.” Ad has been said this tax isa burden on intelligence. Is costs the publishers of books, magazines and pewspapers vast sums annnally and doesn’t put a single penny in the treasury. But the Trust will probably contribute liberally to the Republican campaign fund next fall and the Republican machine is willing to sac- rifice the intellectual advantages which free wood pulp and free paper would afford the people in order to secure that advan- tage to the Republican machine. *‘To this complexion have we come at last.”’ The corruption fand controls Congress. The Versatile Republican Machine, The versatility of the Pennsylvania Re- publican machine is shown in the equal cordiality with which ite recent State con- vention endorsed THEODORE ROOSEVELT and Bois PENROSE. “We commend the wise and courageous administration of President THEODORE ROOSEVELT,” these platform mechanics state in one sentence and ‘we recognize the influence in national legislation of our senior United States Sena- tor, Bois PENROSE, his energetic and faith- fal disobarge of every duty,’’ in another. One or the other of these declarations ie pare buncombe. The Good Book says one can’t serve God and Mammon. It would be quite as difficult for the same person to endorse ROOSEVELT and PENROSE as the same time. These two men represent the antipodes of polities in so far as sheir public profes. sions go. ROOSEVELT pretends to be a re- former, at least, and certainly aims at the centralization ol power in the executive, while PENROSE is in complete accord with FORAKER, HALE and ALDRICH in their desire to maintain, not ooly she dignity, hut the prerogatives, of the Senate. Be- sides they entertain diametrically opposite notions with respect to the regulation of corporations. KOOSEVELT would wake every magnate of power and wealth kowtow hefore him and PENROSE would make the rest of us kowtow to the maguates. The proverbial feat of riding two horses run- ning in opposite directions would be a tril- ling task compared with endorsing both these public characters. A convention gaided by contractor Mo- NicHOL, of Philadelphia, and participated in by the banditti of the swo big cities is not likely to be very punetillicns abont what it says on any subject. The chances are, anyway, that less than oue-filth of the delegates know the difference between the principles of one party and the other and if PENROSE would tip the wink most of them would vote for probibision or endorse the religions views of VOLTAIRE. The endorse- ment of PENROSE was probably the only sincere thing done by the convention and the only reason that any value attaches to that action is that it may fool some country Legislators into voting for him for re-eleo- tion. ~The repairing of the wall along Spring creek on south Water street by putting down a concrete foundation is a commendable job and one that should now make the wal! at that place withstand any rush of water that can come down that stream. as a From the Altoona Times, In Rassia they bave what they call a ‘‘black cabinet” or department of espial. In the United States we have the ‘‘secret service’’ at Washington which is supposed to consist of detectives to spy upon coun- terfeitors and smugglers. In Rassia the detectives look for those who are plotting against the government, aud no one is free from their espionage. Here the govern- ment detectives are supposed to confiue their work to the protection of the treasury with all its nomerouns bureaus, but evidence presented to the committee on appro- priations that seoret service agents have been used for all kinds of ‘‘spying” work, fl shere bis grows up in the service : system of espionage that smacks strongly of the black cabinet of Russia. At a recent hearing of the committee on appropriations some startling testimony was given concerning the case of a navy officer who suspected his wife of having improper relations with a midshipman. A seoret service agent was put to work to get evidence at the instance of the navy department. Divorce proceedings resulted. This instance of activity by secret service agents outside the field of operations marked out for them in laws passed by congress prompted the committee to insert in the sundry civil bill a clause prohibit. ing secret service men from og in any duty other than guarding the person of the president and enforcing the laws against counterfeiting. Such use of public officials would be thought all right in antooratic Russia, but it is all wrong in the United States, with it’s Demooratic-Republican government. This country is rapidly copying thr ways of the monarohical countries of Earope. In fact, we have many of unpleasant trap- pings of czars and kings, with the increased power of the naval and military bureaus, spending as muoh, or more, money than empires, and aping the doings of autooratioc governments, No such use of the people’s money was ever attempted, or even thought of, a short while ago, aud such signs of growing subservienoy to the demands for a central- ized government should be checked before it ia too late. If the secret service can be used by the officials of the navy department to spy into the family affairs of subordinate officers, it could also he used for politioal purposes to spy upon the doings of Democrats and others who desire to reform abuses in the government which Republican policies bave produced, or vice versa, were condi- tions reversed. From the Philadelphia Record. Ever since the exposure of the capitol looting by a Demooratic State Treasurer the Republican managers in Pennsylvania have been vociferously expressing their righteons wrath over the betrayal of truss on the part of the Organization State officials involved. How genuine is their indignation ? Let the following excerpt from the platform adopted by she Republi. can State Convention answer the question : ‘We believe that the business of all de- partments of our State government under Republican control is being wisely and honestly conducted.” The onareful limitation of this expression of confidence to the departments of our “State government under Repablican con- trol” isa deliberately pointed ivsult of State Treasurer Berry, he being the head of the only department not ander Republican control. It was Berry who turned the light on the capitol thieves. It was he who made necessary she repudiation of the de- tected grafters in the Republican ranks by the undetoted grafters, In revenge for the hamiliation his steadfast devotion to duty has put upon the organization responsible for the plundering he is malicionsly singled out from all the other State officials to he charged by implication with unwisely and dishonestly conducting his office. If the leaders of the Republican party in Pennsylvania were sincere in their profes. sions with regard so the wholesale robbery of the taxpayers in the capitol constraction they would bave heaped unstinted praise upon the courageous official who came to the people's resone even in their state platform. In common decency they conld have done no less Bat they stand hefore the voters of Penneylvania as self-confessed hypoerites. In their eagerness to slap the author of their misfortunes they have for- gotten caution and publicly stultified them- selves. Low cunning has hlundered. The sheep's clothing of penitence no longer disguises the organization woll. The peo ple bave in the Republican platform a vivid X-ray impression of the real attitude of the virtnons Republican party toward the greatest political crime in Pennsylva- nia’s history. Looks Like Arrangement for Stampede. From the Pittsburg Post. Young Mr. Beveridge of Indiana has been openly insulted by the Republican national committee permitting the announcement to be made that by some heiter-skelter style of voting it has dieplaced him as tem- porary chairman of the Chicago convetion and selected Senator Dolliver, of Iowa. The reason is spread thas fear was enter- tained thas Beveridge in one of his peerless keynotes wouid stampede the convention to Roosevelt. This seems to lack substance. When did this committee choose Beveridge? How can a sonvention be Sampifed ojo a nomination ore it permanently organized? Lodge is to be permanent chair- man and there wonld be a stampede for Roosevelt. Beveridge is under binding instructions tor Fairbanks. He can ssiil start a stampede during a ballot by casting some votes for Roosevelt. This whole gaunzy story looks like an arrangement for a stampede. it comes from the Roosevelt corner ~—J0 their dual track and field meet with Syracuse University, at Syracuse, N. Y., last Saturday, State College was defeated by the score of 65 to 43. Tomor- row State will compete with the Carlisle Indians on Beaver fleld, at State College. - Spawls from the Keystone. ~The Lehigh Valley Railroad company has begun storing coal at its large plant near Hudsondale, about twelve miles grom Hazle- ton. —The Juniata Valley Electrec Railroad company bas decided upon a big extension of its line so as to cover Huntingdon with a complete network of trolley service. —1In one year six cows belonging to John Keen, of Warwick, Chester county, prodaced seventeen tons and 570 pounds of milk, or an average of over 5,760 pounds, or 720 gallons each. —A new coal breaker is in course of erec~ tion at Jeansville, near Haz!eton, to be com - pleted by fall, which will have a capacity of 3,000 tons of coal aday. 1t will be one of the largest in the anthracite region. —Out of forty-four candidates who took the examination for the position of mine fore- man for the Tenth Pennsylvania bituminous district, only eleven were successful and have received their certificates for the posi- tion, —(3ecrge Barr, wanted by the police for robbing the postoffice at Sterling Ran, Cam- eron county, of $125, was captured on Thurs- day by constable Mutterbaugh, of Medix Run, Elk county, after a two days’ chase on freight cars. —E. 8. Fenner, of Franklin, who was a Civil war veteran, on Saturday received 8 check from the war department for $3.78 with a note explaining that it was due him since November, 1861, his pay for that mouth for some reason having been short that amount. —Thomas Smith, who was separated from bis wife Annie, during the Johnstown flood nineteen years ago, met her on the streets of Pittsburg on Tuesday night. The recogni tion was mutual and the pair decided to cele. brate, and got so hilarious that both were locked up. ~The Boyertown relief committee, at a meeting on Saturday, decided to distribute a balance of $0,900 yet in their hands among the fifty-six orphans left by the opera house disaster on January 13th. The money will be paid to the guardians or care takers of the orphans, who must be reliable persons. —Joseph Munlis on Saturday fell ninety feet down an air shaft at the Royal Oak col- liery, Shamokin, and had his skull fractured. Rescuers lowered a chain attached to a rope on which he managed to seat himself and was pulled to the surface, when he became unconscious. He is not expected to recover. —JIke E1by the genial lieutenant of police during the Walker administration in Altoona has been appointed a special policeman to guard the property of the Spruce Creek Rod and Gun club at Sprue Creek. Toe appoint- ment was made by Governor Stuart at the request of the club and it has been filed with the county authoritiesat Huutingdon. —At the Philadelphia and Reading shops at Newberry Junction there has heen a re- sumption of work on a small scale. Friday thirteen men were taken on at the shops, the increase in business making their em- ployment necessary. This resumption of work has been forecasted and it is expected that work on a large scale will follow short ly. —While fishing in the Susquehanaa river near Danville, on Wednesday, Gearhart Obendorf and his son, Cameron, hooked a carp measuring thisty-six inches in length and weighing sixteen pounds. So fierce were the struggles of the fish to get free that it pulled the older Obendorf into the water and it required an hour's fight to secure the big fish. —About the last of the big timber in this State is now being taken out by A. Cook & Son, iu Clarion county, under contract for the Brits: government. The timber con- sists ot spars to be used in the construction of Euglish war ships in Evgland. The average length of these spars is 45 feet and thickness 2} feet square, They are of white pine and withont blemish. —The executive comm ttee of district No. £, United Mine Workers of Awerics, met in Clearfield, on Friday and took up the matter of providing financial assistance for the men on strike or in distress through idleness in the several counties. President Patrick Gil. day said that fully 5 000 men are idie in the district, most of them us the result of slack mining demand. —A new brick plant, with a capacity of 25,000,000 per sunum, is being buiit at Cly- mer, Indiana conoty. Among the persons interested in the plant are Thomas Bellis, of Altoona, formerly of Philipsburg, aud a part- ner of James Passmore in the coal business in Indiaca county; J. L. Snyder, of Clear- field; H. W. Widdowson, of Muabaffoy; W. D. Kelley, of Philadelphia, and Hon. IL 8, Fisher, of Indiana, Pa. ~The position of deputy internal revenue collector held by James W. Hayes, of Holli- daysburg, has been placed under the regula- tions of the civil service commission by an official proclamation of President Roosevelt, and as a result, Mr. Hayes and other officials of the department will continue in their posi- tions. Mr. Hayes has held the position of deputy revenue collector during tbe past two administrations and has been a most effi* cient officer, being highly esteemed by his superior officers. —In divorce proceedings instituted by Mrs. Hattie Mahaffey, of Williamsport, against her husband, William 8. Muabafley, who resides on a farm in Clearfield county, testimony was given to show that the couple were married on April 28th, 1892. and lived together on the farm until April 16th, 1905, when Mrs. Mahaffey left him because of al- leged cruel treatment. During all that time he never purchased her a pair of shoes and only two cheap dresses and she was obliged to go to the woods to cut wood so as to get some to burn. —Despite the fact that four organizations of detectives are working on the hold.up of Adams Express Messenger Noah H. Roshen by two men, who robbed the safe on the St. Louis express at Walker's Mills Thursday night, the sleuths confess today that they are completely baffled. The detectives have not the slightest clue that would lead to the identity of the two men, who are reported to have held revolvers at the head of the messenger, blindfolded him, bound him to a chair and, after taking four bags filled with money and valuables from the safe pulled the bell cord and escaped from the train,