Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, June 05, 1908, Image 1

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    “
9)
we
should be in sympatby with. That is,that
‘the platform of our party for the national
. North American bad the back-bone of a
——
ing the right pod condemning the wrong,
: ‘became nauseating long ago when it was
say, it is nod a paper with a conviction and
-
’ : : : - ; Spawls from the Keystone.
—The Hipple planing mili,of Lock Haven,
has just received a large contract for furnish.
ing office furniture and fixtures for barracks
at army posts.
~The Colonial Iron company’s furnaces at
RBiddlesburg, Bedford county, resumed opera.
tions Monday after béding banked since
February. These furnaces are the largest in
the region aud have undergone complete re-
pairs. \
—Ezra Reist, of Manheim, Lancaste: coun-
BY P. GRAY MEEK.
Ink Slings. 1
When Waxes goes to Congress
T'here'll be something doin’ sure,
They'll be speeches for the money-bags
And pensions for the poor.
Theyre'il be seeds for all the farmers
And free mail-routes everywhere,
And Warxzs's goin’ to Congress,
t1e's a habit of gettin’ there.
—Au illuminated key hole is one of the
latest inventions recorded. It is an acoes-
sory after the fact to the illuminated nose.
—Is is quite certain that Col. REYNOLDS
won’ find is a very pleasant task playing
catspaw to pull Mr. Noisy Haraoops'
chestnuts oat of the fire,
—Senator PLATTS gave bis wile $70,000
to keep her quiet and plenty of other men
would be glad to do the same to accom-
plish the same end il they only bad the
seventy. ow ™
Perhaps if we changed its pame from
decoration to precipitation day there might
be a better chance of having one 30th of
May without a rain'to spoil the parade and
route the exercises.
—With two trains to Denver it is appar-
ent thas the Democrats of Pennsylvania in-
tend making a fuss at the nomination it
they won’t be heard of at the election of
the next President.
~Congress has adjourned and a lot. of
statesmen will find it very bard convincing
their constituents betwsen this and Novem-
ber that they did anything while in Wash-
ington to warrant their return to legislative
balls.
~The frequency with which dynamite is
used in bombs, for wrecking street cars and
houses in this country mightiead Russia to
imagine that all the governmental unrest
1n the world is not centered in the domain
of the Czar.
—That Waynestown, Indiana, bavker
who is in jail for stealing a horse might have
learned from Mr. BiLLy MONTGOMERY, of
Pittsburg, that if you bad to go to jail for
stealing you had better go for stealing
something worth while, :
—The old story of the pot and the kettle
sarapping as to their color has a modern se-
quel in the action of Col. REYNOLDS con.
testing Lewis V. EMERY’S seat in the Re-
publican national convention because of
his doubtful Republicanism.
—It was a grand achievement for AL.
pRIcH and FAIRBANKS to pass that out-
rageous ourrency bill with the grandeur
to the borders of brilliancy by
their taking advantage of a blind man's
inability to see in order to achieve it.
~The President was thrown from his
horse, while riding in Rook creek park on
Wednesday, and landed in the waters of a
rocky creek after a tumble of ten leet. The
President ie lucky and his luck was with
him because he was net hurt. Now for a
dime wuseum to get the horse that threw
ROOSEVELT.
. -=When DAVID B. HILL said at the re-
interment of former Vice President GEORGE
B, CLINTON, at Kiogston, N. Y., the other
day, that ‘he knew enough to know that
he didn’t know it all,’’ be gave expression
‘$0 a thought that is probably making a
great many of the Senator's enemies soratch
their heads quite a little.
‘—The stand that the Maryland Demo-
cratic convention has taken voices one prin-
ciple, at least, that every true Demoorat
.
wo
STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION.
VOL. 53 BELLEFONTE, PA., JUNE 5, 1908.
drig bouse $75 for a four year crop
seng grown on.a patch of ground sixteen
twenty-four feet. At that rate an acre .
yield a crop worth $8,000, or $2,000 per year.
~To be pennilesson Monday and to refuse
$45,000 for an oil gusher and leases on thirty
acres of land Saturday night was the ex-
perience of Harry N. Hoffman, of Penn
township, Butler county, last week. The
well he struck has a flow that will make him
rich in a short time. ¢
~While William Jones, of Mahanoy City,
was cleaning & horse on Wednesday he
noticed the horse was in danger of choking
to death when he thrust his band down the
animal's throat and drew out a $20 gold piece
which the horse had evidenly taken up
while eating his feed.
~The Keystone Coal sud Coke company
has donated fifteen acres of ground, near
New Alexandria, Westmoreland county,
divided into one hundred foot patches, which
has all been ploughed and harrowed, for the
use of the families or children of miners, for
raising vegetables and flowers.
~The stone work on the new river bridge
at Jersey Shore is about completed, and by
the end of the week it is expected that
everything will be finished about the abut-
ments and pier so that the builders can com~
| mence their work on the iron structure,
which began arriving on Tuesday. ;
—Au inquest Tuesday, held over the body
of a man found in the creek near Sunbury
Monday night, resulted in the positive
identification of the corpse as that of F. M,
Bloom, the bank clerk, who disappeared
about three weeks ago, after a shortage in
his accounts of $6,000 had been discovered.
Final arrangements have been made for
the state encampment of the Sons of Vet-
eraus, which is to be held in Williamsport
beginning tomorrow and lasting one week.
A fund of $40,000 has been contributed by
the citizens for the use of the Sons of Vet-
erans’ committee in entertaining the ex-
pected visitors.
—By the will of the late Josephine M.
Peck, of Williamsport, provision is made for
a memorial window to be placed in the new
Third Presbyterian church to the memory of
her two children. The cost of the window
is mot to exeeed $500. Mrs, Peck also be.
queathed 300 of her valuable lantern slides
to Rey. Dr. Armstrong, pastor of the church.
—Three boys were out rowing in the
Clarion river, at Ridgway, on Wednesday,
when they discovered the body of 2 man in
the water, which was afterwards identified
as that of George Pondelevegos, who disap-
John Sharp Williams, LaFollette’'s Fight.
The time was unpropitions for Senator
LaForuerre's ‘‘fliboster,’”’” and the con-
ditions were unfavorable. If there had
been a donstitutional limit to the session,
one or even ten weeks ahead, his purpose
might bave been achieved. Senators STONE,
GoRE and Davis, taking turos in “‘spell-
ing’ him, would bave made a discussion of
ten weeks possible. Bat with six months
of time to bridge over by constant talking,
the enterprise was foreordained to deleat.
This is why the Democrats of the body de-
termined against captious resistance. It is
why the Republican leaders contemplated
the “‘filibuster’”’ with complacency. The
owner of a substactial stone wall is véver
worried when a man undertakes to break it
down with hie head. . /
Nevertheless. we are unable to withhold
an expression of admiration for the Senator
who undertook the intpossible task. He was
working in a righteous cavse. He was
fighting vicious legislation and supported
in a hopeless labor by the consciotisness that
he was right, The Democrats in the Sen.
ate opght to have given bim stronger moral
support. They koew that be couldn’t sue
ceed and were probably justified in not
leading the movement themselves, for in
politics, as in war, nothing except success is
justified. Bat they might have shown a
liness for the ‘‘insurgent from Wis.
n,”” and thus helped him to totter
under his burden. Bat they indicated an
indifference to the resulé which strength-
ened the purposes of the machine.
The bill which was enacted into law be-
dause of LAFOLLETTE'S failure is an atroci-
ty in legislation. It isn’ even a creditable
makeshift. If it would prevent financial
‘panic or industrial paralysis, it might be
Seoupeed 10 eter Nias Sut . Bak, Ju Republican candidate, respectable or other-
merit, Towill fou ry wise, decent or disreputable. He would
J promige pan make | 0s say shat CANNON or PAYNH supported
currency disturbances inevitable. It may |, policies, in asking ‘people %0 a
serve to fool the people antil after the eleo- them, but he would find some pont
pou, bog Roan Mere ns bitter Passe. ‘urge if their bebalf and if there were no | of she present Congress for Spoptiniaus
: Toe PIO" | potter he would simply cite political ex- | for the army and navy and for ons.
vision for issuing emergenoy currency WAY | i... icq as auiple and safficiens. The Ore. | These foot up close to $40,000,000, or
bridge over a currency famine from October gon men were servile avd banth about 40 per cent. of the total of a billion.
; A year of our ** $'’ now
until the middle of November, but it will || oo "pC Ct he would have been for y tof gus Mg blisient ho
em anyway, because they happened to be | Spai
assume the greater fury because it was de- Spain.
layed. Still the Republicans of Congress | Republiosn candidates. : or, sivil daisititation,. 1. argent
are responsible.
— $224,000,000 is appropriated, but most of
Militarisma Rampant and Spreading. this comes haok, of course, in the postal
— revenues, Euormous as are she general
An unusually “interesting Washiogton appropriations for the comipg year, Shey
dispatoh the other day conveyed this infor- represent only what remained after a vigor-
mation : *‘Five hundred American marines ous pruning of the estimates, such import-
will police the one hundred polling places
ant objects as the proposed foress reserves
for example, being allowed little or noth-
in Panama during the presidential election
the first week in July, if the t seri-
ons intention of the United States govern-
ment is carried out.”” This proposition
certainly deserves serions attention. It is
going to the limit of militarism. It ie the
extremity of imperialism. The Spanish
government never went as far in Cuba. Na-
POLEON cculdn’t have gone further,
The excuse for this outrage upon polgical
liberity is that there is danger that the ad-
ministration party in Pavama will be de-
feated. The administration party in Pana.
wa is composed of the group of adventurers
and pirates who, under the encouragement
of RoosgverT and supported by American
marines, organized a revolution against the
government of Colombia and created the
bogus republic of Panama. Being without
purpose, other than robbery, destitute of
character and devoid of principle, it bag ex-
isted since by force supplied by the govern-
‘ment of the United States.
This avnouncement is tbe forerunner of
similar performances at home. When RoOSE-
VELT anpounced to the Governors in confer-
We Democrats of the porth have every
‘reason to express admiration for the mas-
erful leader of the minority in the House
during the session just closed, Hon. JouN
SHARP WILLIAMS, of Mississipi. He made
a fight for right against odds which were
overwhelming, and though he didn’t ad:
complish all his purposes, he Yoroed the
consideration and adoption of some meas-
ures of the highest value. If he bad been
less capable and courageous fhe work of the
session would bave been m worse. In
other words, if Mr. WILLIAMS bad nofas-
serted himeelf as be did mach more bad
legislation would have been ensoted and
some good bilis that were passed would
have failed. /
During the whole session of greas length
and unusual activity Mr. WILLIAMS made
but one tactical mistake, and his record is
marvelons. When the TAWKEY force bill
was attached to the MoCALL publicity bill,
the Demoorats voted against it. This was
an error of judgment. The TAWNEY loroe
bill was the spawn of a political concubin-
age. It was an outrage uponfevery prin.
ciple of honor and decency. Probably no
other man in Congress than TAWNEX
would have debased himsel! by acknowl-
edging the paternity’ of it. Bat baving
been attached to the publicity bill in the
face of the just protest of every Democrat
on the floor the members of that party, with
equal unanimity, should have voted for
it with its iniquitons and unconstitutional
amendment attachment.
Notwithstanding this error of judgment,
however, the minority of she Houge during
the sessions juss closed acted with great
courage and wisdom and the leadership of
Mr. Winniams was both masterful and
patriotic. At the close of the present Con-
gress Mr. WiLL1AMS will leave the popular
bravoh in order to take a seat in the other
chamber sud he will adorn that lofty sta-
tion in the public life of the country. Bat’
we look forward to the transfer of his mo-
tivities with more or less regres. In so
far as it is a promotion, it is deserved, and
ships as the President wanted. They sup-
ported every crazy notion be promulgated
in relation to railroad regulation or corpo-
rate control. Bat it was not beosuse of
these evidences of servility so him, person-
ally, that he has undertaken to help them
in their campaign for re-election. It is be-
cause they are Republicans and their op-
who has ever participated in the public lite
of the country. He will freely fraternize
with soy criminal if eush a prostitution of
she great office he occupies will belp his
party. He bas neither civio pride nor moral
understanding. He bas falsified to gain a
party advantage and favored outlaws to
‘promote political success. He is more at
home in the society of ruffians and maurder-
ere than in the company of decent citizens,
BaT MasrersoN or JOHN L. SULLIVAN
can monopolize his time while Senators and
Congressmen are worrying in the ante-
room. ‘Birds of a feather flook together,”
aud the bond of sympathy between RoosE-
VELT and DAHMAN is stronger than that
between the President and, say Senator
HALE, of MAINE,
Bat candidates of ‘the Republican
for Congress need no hesitate about
RoosSEVELT'S endorsement because they
didn’s support his policies during she re-
cent session. He is for the election of the
able the world at large would not be sorry
to see a check to Japanese tumptiousness.
National?! Expenees.
From the Philadelphia Public Ledger.
Peace conferences find a subject lor
river, about two weeks ago. The man's
throat was cut and » large sum of money it
was known he had was missing. -
~The New York Central railroad company
has asked for bids for the construction of &
six miles branch road, to be built this sum-
mer. It will start from the company’s River
Line at Sbawville, and will tap some coal
lands on which Rembrandt Peale has for some
years held leases. The new branch will open
a territory hitherto undeveloped, aud wheré
there are vast deposits of valuable coal.
—Allen P. Perley. president of the Wil-
liamsport Furniture company, bas been ap-
pointed postmaster of Williamsport to suc-
ceed Orange S. Brown, deceased. There
were several applicants and the appointment
of Mr. Perley, whose name bad not been
mentioned, was quite a surprise, but the
appointment gives general saticfaction as Mr.
Perley is prominent in business and social
life.
—During a severe thunder storm which
passed over Huntingdon on Tuesday after-
noon & chimney of the library building at
Juniata college and a chimney at Standing
Stone hotel were struck by lightning, but
little damage was done. The baru of RB. C.
Gregory, of Shaver’s Creek valley, was also
struck and set on fire but by the quick work
of the farm hands the flames were soon ex-
tinguished. hte
—Ou Friday a number of Italians working
on & state road near DaBois, got into a dis~
pute about the men’s wages, when they threw
down their shovols and marched on the com=
missary in & body and demanded their pa¥.
Five of them drew revolvers and threatened
to shoot Tons Farraro, the man in charge
transfer a matter of popular satisfaction.
In avy evens, however, JOHN SHARP
WILLIAMS has earned the kindliest feel-
inge of his countrymen. *
—— ‘
A Disrepuiable Subterfuge.
The New Carrency Law,
The Philadelphia bankers are unrecon-
oiled to the onrrency bill forced through at
the closing hours of the session of Congress.
It was, or is, the result of party exigency,
rather than a desire to promote business in-
terests, they say. ‘‘I have gone carefully
over the measure,’ one of the Philadelphia
financiers remarked, the other day, ‘‘and
cannot see that it has a single redeeming
feature. To the worst features of the AL-
DRICH bill respeoting bonds,’ he continues,
“it adds some provisions for bank associa-
tions almost certain to oause confusion
should it ever be called into play.”
Other bankers take equally hopeless
views of the subject. **The politicians have
made it barder for us to deal with the emer-
gency probleme,” is the way one of the
most conspicuous bankers states it. So
they bave, but the Philadelphia bankers
were not expected to complain about a trifle
like that. There is no real danger of a
panic until after the election and then
nobody cares. If the Republican candidate
is elected with a friendly Congress they wiil
have four years in whidh to fix things up,
and if the Democratic candidate is success-
fol it will be easy to blame the panic on
that resnlt.
The emergesioy currency bill, as it is 0
called, was simply intend in will besafe in the hands
ence that in the. event Congress should fail ' ple ey ly ea ‘nate pins hub og
to do what he wants,he would do it inspite | ooo oniet, as they will be led |. From this we may assume that Mr. Taft
of Congress, the spirit of his Panama policy. EE compelled | wip receive the united support of the Wall
en . he ‘Governom. Ytened o, it w plish ite purpose. The | street influence, and thas bankers and
expresnd. : pom panic of last year came in October and was railroad managers will vie with each other
patiently obviously treasonable tense for a few weeks heoause i¢ required | ib Alling the *‘dough-bags of thy Raput-
laration because they are servile tothe boss. time to organize expedients for fotitiods lican party. The ‘‘malefactors of great
But JEFF DAVIS or BoB-TooMBS never nut : | wealth” have evidently, as Mr. Schiff says,
tered a more reasonable heresy, and if the y. The bill in question affords the | ‘become readily convinced” that they
iens in the hall a billion olearing | ‘‘will be safe’ in the bands of Tals.
people will submit to this military. control currency for which it provides. Of ——
of te Section in Pavamain July they may course when the period of liquidation ar- An Enormous Defloit,
tary En w-_ rives a few months later, ft will be awful, | yrom the Pittsburg Post.
bat thas will be after the eleotion and 'what | May's statement of Government receipts
: 3: H
——This (Friday) evening is the time does the machine care then. : aud sapenditures cuntinnes she¥loim, 204
for the annual reception at the Bellefonte | ___Bellefonters will tomorrow have an | Will t00u evokea haw! from the
Asadstny 36 Yoo Weather being favorable opportunity to see what will perhaps be for raaing tasif . The
She attendance will undodtedly Ye args, |e ges hme of ‘oak Abe Bontetwy | gurptys winSeLSULON Jor tis 11 Sigetee
r years ago the Academy re- | nine will play this season, when they | the defloit is
ception has grown to be a feature in the | will oross bate with the strong Juniata | Ocipte i felon $56,000,000,
routine of that institution of considerable | College team on the new athletio grounds. the expenditures went right along 10 $73,-
importance gud is always looked forward Tae Tora boys bave played a fast game 000,000 big lox] er )
i old and young. Last year the reception was with a big string of victories to their ored- | fessed. For a May inoreasp shots at the burglars, inflicting wounds upon
someniot Samed by inclement weather, | jt, Whichever team wins, it will be a Vio Tog Meio
and it is boped that this evening ‘will be | game well worth the small price ol twenty- | carry a bad election en over into. July,
| more favorable. As in former years noinvi- | ye cents admission, and Belletonters | and a new year. Hi
Jativhs lve tecy sea wt but ull patrose should turn out in big numbers to witness
and friends of the institution are cordially | jy, : os : n |
invited to attend. Following the reception | | — that Heola Park had suffered severely by
a dance will be given in the armory under | ——A squad of fittéen students taking | reason of the recent cloudburst near that
the auspices of former students of the she mechanical engineering course at The | point. This is incorrect. In fact Heola
Academy. Christy Smith's orchestra will Pennsyivania State College, in charge of Park, with ite clean walks, beautifal lawns.
tarnish the music for both the reception | assistant professor Hardld B. Shattuck, and flower beds never appeared to beiter
and dance. nh gay went to Altoona last Friday morning and advantage than at this time. Many dates
{inspected the shops and yards of the Penn- for pionipe and other gatherings have al-
Secretary TAFT was less adroit thao usual
in his reply, last week, to Mr. BrYAN'S
proposition that as the leading candidates
of their respective parties they unite in a
request that Congress enact the publicity
bill. He said that some weeks previously
be had announced his friendliness for that
hin of legislation and inferentially charged
that Mr BRYAN was tardy in his reform
work. In that assertion he was both un-
candid and disingenuous. His pretense
looks like a professional alibi, the most con-
temptible expediént of the professional
criminal. :
Secretary TAFT had in a private letter to
Senator BURROWS, of Michigan, written in
favor of the passage of a publicity bill. Bat
BURROWS, apparently with TAFT'S assent,
baried the fetter in his inside pooket and
used all his influence to prevent the pas-
sage of such legislation. Either be inter-
the Secretary’s statements 80 written
in a PICK WiICKian sense, and acted in the
direction opposite to that which it poiuted,
or else be is an enemy rather thanja friend
of the Secretary in his present campaign for
the Republican nomination. In either
event, the quoting of the letter was a die-
reputable subterfuge.
It TAFT had been earnestly in favor of
the McCALL publicity bill the snggestion
of Mr. BRYAN came $0 him in ample time
to goarantee the passage of it. It doesn’t
take long for the Republican machine in
Washington to enact legislation it desires.
Even in the face of the most earnest apd de-
termined filibuster ever attempted, the
atiooious currency bill was forced through
in little more than twenty-four hours. Bus
Tarr didn’s want the bill to pass. He wants
to give the trusts, corporations and erimivals
a chance to enjoy the fall privilege of de.
bauching the electorate in his behalf,and he
wrote the private letter t0 BURROWS to be
used after the event rather than to exercise
an influence on legislation.
Like his trip to Panama, recently, that
tricks might be pulled off during
his absence, this lester was ‘a fraud and
false pretense. ;
—
ing. The rapid increase in the national
expenditures is wily explained by the
constant extension onal activities,
ever beyond the natural growth of the
Tha propriated at this
© The great sum ap) at ees.
sion becomes seriogs only in consideration
of the faot that it is largely in excess of the
estimated revenues. This will farther
complicate the qu-stion of tariff revision
next. winter by waking it necessary for
Congress to provide more revenne rather
than less, since there appears no likelihood
of lessened expenditures,
. F———————————————
Wall Street Supports Tal.
From the Johnstown Democrat,
There may be some doubt about how
¢ the revolt of labor will be at
Tals, but that Wall ‘street inter-
ests will warmly su him with money
and votes seems n. That reprageiste:
tive Wall street banker, Jacob H. Schiff,
the partner of that ‘“‘malefactor of great
wealth,” Mr. Harriwag, | hae accepted she
vioce-presidency organization
the state of New York. He declares ‘‘that
with a rigid insistence for the due and
proper regard of the law, all classes of our
campaign should not be made to fit the
views of the candidate, but should be a re-
affirmation of honest Democratic principles
with an abandonment of all fads and popu-
listio theories.
~The pluck of the American bog. knows
no limit. On Wednesday fourteen-year-
old SeLBY HARRINGTON, of Georgetown,
Del., swam two miles through a rough sea
to procure aid for three little girls whom he
had taken out sailing and were clinging to
the bottom of his overturned boat. It took
him one boar and a balf to swim to shore;
bus the children held onto the boat and
were rescued. It ie such acts of hercism
‘that proves the American the truest, most
noble and self-sacrificing type of man. Tf
SeLBy HARRINGTON ien’t on the next
CARNEGIE hero ligt it is not because he has
not won a place there.
—ZAbous the most contemptible, pusillan-
imous, unreliable sheet $0 be called a met-
ropolitan journal is the Philadelphia North
American. Its continued ranting about
fighting the battles of the people, defend-
knives. Farraro fled aud later nine of the
men were arrested.
—Henry Wells, who has been employed in
the Bon Ton store at Patton for several
months, left that place on Tuesday, April
98th, for his home at Pottsdam, N. Y., and
has not been heard from since. His wife
has become alarmed at his absence and fear-
ing foul play has asked the aid of the police
in locating him. He is about 45 years of age,
five fee:, nine inches tall, weighing about
165 pounds asd wore a mustache elightly
tinged with gray. :
—Three foreigners went to the home of
James Rico, a boarding house boss, at Cham.
bersville,eight miles south of Punxsutawney,
Sunday night,and after being reused meney,
discovered that the North American bas ul-
terior motives in everything. That is to
a courage to defend it, but a sycophantio
paoderer to ihe personal ambitions of a cer-
tain coterie of men iu particular and the Re-
publican party in general. The latest ex-
hibis of ite truculence and poltroonery is
ninde fo its charges that she Dedoorats in |
cured $450 from her. The woman's husband,
!
man is said to have made 5 ahie-poriems
staggment that implicates n Pi rg Black
Hand society.
—Qlyde C. Bathurst, of Mt. Union, a son
‘of ex-Sheriff Bathurst, of Huntingdon
Just as if the Democrats in Congress could
be held responsible for anything when that
body is over whelmingly Republican. If the | railroad on ait up-grade. Just when he got
on the track his motor stopped and left
he and the machine stranded right in front
of a fast moving train. Grabam jomped
and saved his life but his ‘machine wae
completely wreoked. ‘The machine, by
Fishing oreek “punky’’ it would pat the close application to study, a traveling schol
blame for thie latest legislative abortion on
the President who signed is almost before
the ink wae dry on its pages, but the
North American and the President are of
Philadelphia. The award received is known
is valued at about $500. The young man will
: the way, was the Buick car be purchased | ——The next big time will be the an- | aylvania railrond company both in that ready been booked by the mapagement and | sail for Naples, Italy, atont the second of
the same ilk—long on conceit and little on trom Horton S. Ray, of this place, the Iat- | nual commencement at The Pennsylvania | immediate olty sod at Juniata. They re: the usual successful season is confidently Jyuvand expects to Yiffs the rival eities
to pt otiamduly. State College June 14éh~17th. | tumed on Saturday Tooked forward 30.4. \
* 4
ty, has just received from a Phi phis
peared from Johnsonburg, nine miles up the .
and others also flourished revolvers and :
shot Mrs. Rico through the shoulder and se~
hearing the shot, broke throfigh one of the
one of them that proved fatal. The dead.
county, and nephew of chief of police Wm. =
F. Bathurst, of Huntingdon, has won by his
arship from the Academy of Fine Arts, of
asthe Emlen Cresson Memorial scholarship. It