. a BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —A word to our candidates. Stay busy ! See everyone ! ~As the vacation shortens the faces of the school children lengthen. ~The new arc light in the Nosth ward echool grounds is designed principally to save wear and tear ou the grass. —Dou’t be foolish enough to think that fall has came, because summer hae not yet went. We bave all saw this kind of weather before. ~There are more women members of clabs in New York thao in any two other cities in the world, remarks an exchange. And almost every day a new volume is added to the vile literature of the day tell- ing of the dissolute lives of many of these Very women. ~The assessors liste show that there are 972 horses at an average value of $70 in Williamsport, but the value of the average Williamsport horse probably swings through a wide variation between the day the assessor gets round sud the day you go to prioe him. ; ~The most important election the coun- try has bad in years is coming on. You will want to exercise your right of fran- chise. You can’t do it unless youjare reg- istered. Wednesday, Sept. 20d, is the last day on which you can register. Are yon wise to your duty. ~The New York World bas come out squarely and fairly for BRYAN. It never | sapported him before, bat now it sees the only hope for reform is deems necessary is nurtured under the baoner of Democracy and once more it is on the fighting line with its old comrades. —Everyoue admits that the sigos are la- vorable. BRYAN's election grows more probable every day. He started out to capture the middle West, but New York is {ooking so good now that it would not be a matter of much surprise to see the Empire | State swing in for the Nebraskan in No- | vember. —Candidate JorN D. MILLER is going right after the Treasurership and most everyove is glad of it for JOHN is a good, clean man ; honest, sober and upright. He is just the kind of a man to be treasurer | Ges busy ! | because he is #0 courteous and genial in | his manner and he represents the best type of citizenship we have : The sturdy, suo- cessful farmer. ~The scheme to have several BRYAN tickets in this county may have been con ceived with the best of motives, bat if it should result in drawing off a considerable number of votes from the regular Demo- cratic column it woald rednoe our repre. sentation in the State convention and that is soarcely to be desired, when there is no real gain to be made, * —"There will not be any blare of tramp- és, nor glare of red fire, but the cam- paigo in this county will open actively next week. It is ap to every Democrat to do his part. We have a good ticket, a much better one than our opponents and with that in our favor the work will cer- “thinly be pleasant, though let us warn you _agaiort falling into the notion'that it will be easy. —Don’t lose track of the fact that we have a very excellent board of Commission- ers. They bave been prudent yet ready for public improvement whenever needs have been apparent and have reduced the county indebtedness materially. It has taken good management to do this in the face of the large appropriation to the mon- ument but it bas been done and the Com- missioners should be given proper credit. The best credit youn can give them is by re- electing them. ~The Gazette wants to know which is better : “Democratic management and a 5 mill tax or Republican, managements and a 3 mill tax?’ What a silly question | The Gazette knows it was Republican management on a 3 mill tax that squan- dered the $25,000.00 balance in the treas- ury and run the county into debt and it also knows that the only reason we have a 5 mili tax now is to pay the debts made by Repoblican mismanagement. The tax pay- ers of Centre county are wise enough not to be impressed with such flap-doodle. —A solitary bandit held up seven stage coaches in the Yellowstone Park, on Mon- day aud robbed the tourists of gix thousand dollars. Wouldn't Col. JoHN DuBss and Col. Dave ForRTNEY, who were held up at the business men’s picnic last week, have a joke on Col. JACK SPANGLER and ELLIs ORVISs, if the latter were among the viotims. It was bad enough to be plucked within seven miles of home, but to go way out to Wyoming to bave it done—well, we'll leave DUBBS and FORTNEY to do the laughing when the other fellows ges back. —The System papers are scouring the land for “ prominent’ (?) Democratic bus- iness men who are going to vote for Tarr. In the first place these ‘‘prominent” busi- ness men are probably of the pin head va- riety we know so well, who think their prominence enhanced by being given a few inches of space in a paper that would never know they exist under other circumstan- ces. In the second, it is a lair chavoce to bet that for every ove of these molly coddles, thas haven't brains enough to have a convio- tion and are to politics what the mutts are who select their church io order to get into sassiety, there will be a hundred good, hon- est, reading, thinking, Republican ocom- mon people who will vote for Bryan and never dream that th | way to all reforms. | Great Commoner and acknowledge _VOL. 53 B STATE RIGHT FEDERAL UNION. $§ AND ELLEFONTE, PA., AUGUST 28, 1908. E——————TS————————— Mr. Bryan's DeMolnes Speech. Of Mr. BRYAN'S great speech at De- Moines, Iowa, a few days ago, the New York TVmes says : ‘‘He marshals the ad- missions and the avowals of representa- tives of the protected interests, the arga- ments and appeals of manafactarers now convinced of the necessity of revision, the principles enunciated by Mr. CLEVELAND and Mr. McKINLEY in support of bis posi- tion that the time has come to reduce the castoms imposts. Much shat he says is quite beyond disproof or denial.” The New York Sun declares that ‘‘it would be unfair nos to recoguize the moderation of the language, the apparent candor of tone, the directness and suavity of statements and the clearness of argament which distin- guieh this and other recent addresses of Mr. BRYAN." The New York Evening Post comments in this laugaage : ‘‘His strongest arguments deal with the Repablican Record of shut- fling and inconsistency on thie question. | The Republicans have talked tariff reform, bave admitted the inequalities of the DiNG- LEY schedules, and yet have done nothing. A Republican President has urged the abolition of a duty on wood pulp, but the stolid ‘‘stand-patters”” have blocked the The Republicans, in fear of offending the protected interests, have not dared to make the obanges which they bave acknowledged are unecessary. Mr. BRYAN, then, is justified in askivg whether the Republicans oan now, alter their eleventh-hour repentance, be trusted to revise the tariff in she interest of the consumer.” These newspapers are not sapporters of Mr. BRYAN and their words of praise are reluctantly given. Bat intelligent ob- servers of ourrent events, they are com- pelled to pay she tribute of justice to she the shortoowings of the Republicaa party. And Mr. BRYAN'S splendid speech deserv- * ed the implied and expressed encomiums. As an esteemed contemporary who is sup- porting him for President declared, the speech was too good and great to epitomize or sammarize. It ought to be read in full by every citizen of the Republic and no man can read it without being impressed with what the New York Sun characterizes as “she mofifPatisi Or Ie" Madlage, the apparent candor of tone and the directness of statement’’ it contains. Mr. Taf Falsified Facts. In his speech delivered at Hot Springs, Virginia, the other day, Mr. TAFT de- clared that ‘“‘the industrial depression of 1893 followed the passage of the WILSON tariff bill.”’ In a presidential candidate we expeot truthfulness, as least, if not ac- curacy. It has been a subject of ‘pride to the American people that until within six years no Presideut of the United States had ever heen accused of faleification. Is onght to be a desire that so long as the country endares we will never again bave a Presi- dent who oan be accused of lying and have the accusation proved. The reckless state. ment of TAFT, quoted above, makes this expectation dependent upon his defeas. The panic of 1893 practically began with the Homestead riots in July, 1892, four mouths before the presidential election of that year. The results of she election was largely influenced hy the impending ipdne- ttial paralysis and before Cleveland. was inauguraied in) March, 1893, preparations had been made to replenish the treasury reserve by selling bouds. Mr. TAFT was a judge on the federal bench at thas, Sime and shrough hi otal . disposi tiop ‘of de: faniting corporatios was familias, seith both industrial pnd financial ocondisiops. The WrLsox — bill was passed in Ooto- ber,1894,80 that thé statement of Mr, Tarr in his Hot Springs speech was, therefore, vot only a falsification, but ode ‘made knowingly. Rise nisi If a gustersnipe politician ora paid party speaker is igoosant or mendacious, we don’s mind it much. What be says is of little consequence and no value. Bat a man who nepires to the great office of President of the United States is under moral obliga tion to be truthful. If heis not he is unfit for the office and his impudent assurance ought to be rebuked by every self-respeot- ing voter in the country. Deliberate lying is among the most contemptible of all vices. Mr. ROOSEVELT'S controversies with Mrs. BELLAMY STORER, Mr. HARRIMAN and others made him a most contemptible figare. The people should see thas a simi- lar humiliation is not pat upon them again. Io other words, a candidate for President who falsifies should be defeated overwhelmingly. ——September 2nd, is a most important day for Democrats. They all want to vote for the next President, and if they are not Registered by the evening of that day they may be unable to cast a ballot for W. J, BRYAN. oS —— — The All-Scholastio football team of Altoona would like to arrange a game with any 1401b. team. Address C. E. Clark, have done soythi to make newspaper sotoriety. yom 2215 Broad Ave. Mr. Meyer's Little Scheme Postmaster General MEYER offers postal saviogs banks as a substitute for the guar. antee of deposits proposed in the Demo- cratic plasform and imagines that he has a panacea for all the commercial and fioan- oial ills from which she country is suffering. “In the postal savings bank the deposits are guaracteed by the government,” Mr. MEYER observes, ‘‘becaunse the government has received the deposits and made iteell responsible.” They would make Post. master General MEYER the biggest and most influential banker in the world, he might bave added, and if he happened to desire it give him a ‘rake off’’ from the | business of all the other banks that he | allowed to exist. We have no doabt that in the event of the election of the Republican candidate for President postal savings banks will be adopted. They are among the pet schemes of ROOSEVELT for the reason that they ave in thedirection of centralization. Judge Tarr himself appears to be without ideas of any | kind ou any sabject, and he would be an | easy mark in the hands of ROOSEVELT and | MEYER in the formation of schemes to | perpetuate the political dynasty which | they imagine they have founded. MEYER | would probably be continued in office on | account of his experience as a banker and the “‘malefactors of great wealth’ would be compelled to give up freely for cam- paiga purposes or suffer denunciation more severe than that imposed on ‘Dear HARRI. MAN.” But it will he a sad day for the onuntry when Mr. MEYER'S idea is legislated into law. The deposits in savings banks ron by the postoffice being guaranteed by the government at the first sign of currency famine every dollar in every community would be drawn from other banks which would be without the guarantee and placed in the savings hank whence it would be shifted to Wall street and made to earn usurious interest for the New York bankers who happened to enjoy she friend- ship of Mr. MEYER or were willing to di- vide the profits with him. As a matter of fact there is no more hazard in guaraotee- ing the deposits in all the banks than in guaranteeing the safety of all the mouey in one bank ander the absolute coutrol of one man of the type of Postm General MEYER. EP —— Facts About Personal Registration. Residents of cities of the 1st, 20d and 3rd classes must personally Register or they canuot vote at all. There is no way by which they can get upon the Registry only by personal application on the following dates ; In cities of the 1st and 20d olasees— Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Allegheny and Scranton —il they have no tax receipts they mast Register on the 3M of September, or lose their votes. II they have a tax receipt, Tor tax paid within two years, they can Register on the 3rd or 15th of Sep- tember or on the 3rd day of October. In cities of the 3rd classes —which means all other cities wishin the State—if they have no tax receipt they must Register on September 1st. If they have a tax receipt dated within two years they can Register either on the 1st or the 15th of September ur on the 17h of October. « ——Edmuuod Blaochard’s horse ran away on Wednesday afternoon and caused con- siderable excitement. John MoCoy was ‘driving the animal in a boggy and was in the aot of getting into the vehicle, at the McCoy home on Lino street, when she ‘horse started. MoCoy was thrown to the grognd but not burt. The horse ran east to Allegheny street, south to the Diamond, “where the. bo ed with the Adams Expréas ‘deli " breaking the shaft, The animal then tarned down High street and | ite the residence of Emil Joseph broke loose from the buggy, the vehicle running in onto the pavement. With parts of the shafts hanging to she torn baroess she horse ran down High street and ato the Palace livery stables. The damage was confined entirely to the buggy, which was pretty badly demolished. i ——— 2%" Sept. 2nd BE Do you ask why we point to that date? If you are not Registergd on or before that time, your vote may be lost. gItfis the last day that you can Register. ~-—Wm. Sampsell, the man arrested last Wednesday for attempted criminal assault on Catharine, the six-year-old daughter of Mrs. Harry Ryan, was given a bearing before justice of the peace John M. Keichline last Friday afternoon. A. W. Moore, of the Western Union Telegraph of- fice, and Frank Shogert were the main wit- nesses against Sampsell and after hearing their evidence the latter eonlessed and was remanded to jail for trial at the September term of court ; apparently not realizing the extreme gravity of his orime. Sp— ~The weather the past week has heen quite Antumnlike. Dollars Rather than Reasons, | i The esteemed Philadelphia Ledger josti- | fies its support of Judge TAFT by stating | that ‘‘independent newspapers like the | Baltimore Sun and the Springfield Republi. | can, whioh have declared in favor of TAFT, express with great decision she belief that Mr. TAFT would be a much safer and a saver pilot of the ship of State than Mr. BRYAN.” The Baltimore Sun, once a great newspaper and potent influence in public aflsire bas degenerated into a wercenary which serves the master who pays moss liberally and the Springfield Republican ex- presses the opinions of a senile gentleman who was somewhat of an oracle half a cen- tury ago. But the esteemed Philadelphia Ledger is even weaker in defending itself on other grounds. For example the Ledger states that ‘‘the only legislation during the ROOSEVELT ad- ministration which could by any possible reasouing bear relation to prosperity or ad- versity was the legislatiqn regulating rail- toads engaged in interstate commerce,’ and therefore, it declares inferentially, that the Republican party is acquitted of any responsibility for the present indastrial and commercial depression. According to Mr. VAN CLEAVE, president of the American Manufacturers’ association, the excessive schedules of the DINGLEY tariff law rob the wage earners of the country of a million dollars a day, and the Republican party is responsible for continuing the robbery dar- ing the entire period of ROUSEVELT'S serv- ice in the office of Presidens. The legislation to regulate railroads had comparatively little to do with the indus- trial slamp which came last fall, bat Roose. VELT'S absurd talk of the centralization of government, the seizare of property and other forms of imperialistic usurpation de- stroyed confidence in the future and oreat- ed uvcertainty for the present. These thiogs brooght on the panic and as Mr. TAFT stands pledged to carry out Roosk- VELT'S policies his election will prolong is. This fact is so plain that it is self evident and in is labored argament for TAFT the Ledger wabbles like a convert to conven, jence rather than conviction. Manifestly oar esteemed contemporary gets its reasons through the coantiog room. * a An’ Excellent Change. ? Democrats thionghout the country will learn with keen satisfaction that the or- igival plans of campaign, so far as they re. late to Mr. BRYAN himself, bave heen changed. It was his intention to wake only a lew speeches and spend most of his time at home where those who had soffi- cient leisure and money to afford the trip could visit him and bear brief addresses on ‘the issues of the campaign. Of course if this pian bad been carried out his short speeches would bave been widely publish- ed and universally read. But he souldn’s bave reached as many people by that method as by the usual campaign tour. It is gratifying, therefore, 20 learn that Mr. Bryan’s plans have been altered, with his own consent, and that he will tour the country as he did in his previous cam- paigus, but with vastly greater effect, be- cause time bas improved him largely and the asperities which sharpened opposition to him before have been toned down or entirely removed. It is sale vo say that in his campaign tour this year Mr. BRYAN will be greeted by an unanimous and en- thusiastio Democracy where ever he goes and that was pot the case in either of his other campaigns. Besides he can present the issues with greater force and effect from the stump. Mr. BRYAN'S campaign itinerary has not been announced as yes, bat it ie certain that he will speak in all the doabttal States among whioh are both New York aod New Jersey. He will make a few speedhes in Indiana and at least one in Kentucky and it ie a safe conjecture that wherever he speaks the respoase will be" all that he can possibly hope for. The plain people of the country believe in Mr. BRYAN and will follow him this year as they never have before. The change in the plan of campaign, therefore, well serve to encourage those who don’t hear him and strengthen those whe do. It was a splen- did resolution. A Matter that Should Not be For. gotten. Young men who voted on age last fall MUST be Registered or they can not vote under any circumstances. Othess who have paid a State or County tax within two years may be able to ewear in their votes, if they are not upon the Registry, but the voter who cast his first ballot in 1907, has no possible chance to do this. He is not upon any duplicate, has no tax assessed against him, and consequently cannot qualify to baving paid a tax, as is necessary where voters are lelé off the Registry. By failing to Register he prac- | and tically and effectually disfranchises himself, There is no way by whioh he can vote, and NO. 34. in 1907, is upon the polling list of 1908, And this must be seen too before the even- ing of September 2nd. Don’t forget this, Bryan on Tariff From the Johnstown Demoerat. Mr. Bryan's tariff speech at Des Moines is a powerful and convincing presentation of the Demooratic position on thas vital subject. It is full of sledge-hammer blows at protection and it is likely so stir the old Democracy up as nothing else from Mr. Bryan has ever dove. Mr. Bryan makes no equivocation in his attack upon the so-called ‘‘American sys- tem.” He hits it bard and he bits is so that it will hart. Few Democratic speakers have discussed she tariff with equal force and equal candor. Too many Democrats have conceded something to the protection claim. Too many bave feared to press the logic of the Democratic position home. Bat Mr. Bryau does not hesitate. He is not afraid. He bas no apology to make for his telling assaults upon a system which at its best is a falee pretense and at ita worst is an unblashing scheme of robbery and cor- ruption. The effect of this speech is likely to be not unlike that of Mr. Cleveland’s famous tariff message in 1887. It is the keynote of the present campaign and since Mr. Bryan has chosen the tariff as the theme of his first address to the American people it is fair to assume that it is because he deems the tariff the subject of first importance. And that is our view. We believe that the tariff isthe keystone of the arch of privilege. To knock it out will be to bring the whole predatory system to the ground. And that Mr. Bryan feels this to be so we are strongly persuaded. He minoes no words in characterizing the grafts which flourishes under the name of protection and by grace of the Republican party. He exposes its operation in every essential de- tail. He makes plain the relation which exists between the protected interests and the party which bas become their band- maiden. And in laying bare the false pre- tense which has so long deceived the masses of the country Mr. Bryan goes far- ther and shows why American wages have been higher than wages in foreign coun- tries. It is nos because of the tariff, but in spite of it. American wages are better is more intelligent ; it works under better conditions, and 1ts opportunities are wider. This indeed is the most convincing part of a most convincing discussion. It goes right to the marrow of the whole wage guestion and if Mr. Bryan shall in futare speeches enlarge apon the idea he has so admirably expressed he will be able to show the American workmen that if his wages have heen higher than those ohtain- ed by the foreigner for like service it has been because land bas been cheaper in this country and opportunity therefore freer. The effect of this speech upon the so- called conservative Democrats, these Demo- crats who have been out of line with the party for the last twelve years, is likely to be great. It is hound to make a profound impression upon most of them and to some it will come as a bugle call to arms. bound to inspire many who havefor a long while been despondensand shat it will enormously stimulate radical tariff re- vision sentiment in the prairie etates is beyond any reasonable douht. Opportunity snd Fu tunity, Equal Oppor- From the Chicago Public, The social philosophy of President Eliot of Harvard is fall of surprises. Having turned the dootrine of personal equality into confasion and rejected it, he seems now to have made ducks and drakes of the dootrine of equality of opportanity. To those who are not over-lettered, persoual equality means equality with reference to rights under the law ; and equality of op- portunity is a corollary, which demande that opportunities to use one’s own powers without depriving others of like liberty shall be maintained. Bat President Eliot discovers that equality of opportunity— whatever he may mean by it, is neither obtainable nor desirable. What he de- mands is ‘‘fis opportunity.” Bus really there is no essential difference between {qual opportunity aod fit opportunity. hen wen are free to exert sheir powers as they choose, within she limits of noun-in- jury to others, they bave equal opportunity. Bat the two things, while essentially the same, may be made widely different in practice. It depends upon who decides as to fitness. Under equal opportunity each decides for himself ; bot under “fit opor- tunity” some one else may decide arbi- trarily for him. Consequently the doctrine of fit opportunity may turn into a eaphem- ism for servitude. The old cotton planters by their own accounts, furnished heir slaves with ‘‘fis opportunity.” ———— Uniformity of Laws. From the Altoona Times. The necessity of uniformity of laws has claimed the attention of leading thinkers for several years, but, although there has been endless agitation of the subject, practically nothing bas heen done to re- move inconsistencies that are the source of great perplexing and incalulable mischief. Foremost among the laws where uni. formity is urgensly demanded are those governing and divorce. The statutes n force in varions states are so widely divergent as to be absolutely ridica- lous. Many of the domestic ills are direot- ly traceable to this prolific source of evil and so insistent bas been the clamor for united and harmonious action between the several states that there is some reason for the hope that it will not be many years until the coveted objective is attained. The American Bar association will hold its anoual session at Seatile this week, and among the most important topics that will be considered will be that of nnilor- wity, espeeially with reference to marriage divorce. Preliminary theretoa ocon- ference of many of the nation’s ablest lawyers and ju last week discussed the a in all ite phases and their recom- Democrats should remember and see thas every young Demoorat who voted on age mendation will assist the bar association ee spawlis from the Keystone. —The thirty-fifth annual Grangers’ inter- state picnic at Williams’ Grove, Cumberland county, is in progress this week. The ex- hibits of farming machivery are unusually large and with fair weather the attendance will be very great. —More fish were received by Huntingdon county on Tuesday night, when at 6:30 the United State fisheries car left off at the Union depot, Huntingdon, 4.500 black and little mouth bass to be distributed in Stone Creek and the Raystown Branch. ~The people of Everett are pleased to learn that the Eariston furnace, operated by Joseph E. Thropp, which has been out of blast for some time undergoing repairs, is to be put in blast early in September. This will give employment to seversl hundred men. —Moses Frehlich, a Jewish newsdealer of Philadelphia, who bas for years had a hard struggle to keep the wolf from the door, has just received intelligence of the death of his grandfather in Russia, and that he is the sole legatee of an estate worth $180,000 in Ameri- oan money. —The potato crop in Lancaster county will be below the average and in some locali- ties will be almost an entire failure, some growers not getting as many bushels as they planted. But in other sections there will be some good yields. Wesley 8. Weaver, near Kinzer’'s expects a crop of 1,200 bushels from six acres. —There have been six deaths from typhoid fever in Hastiogs since the epidemic started several weeks ugo. Miss Margaret Gilliland, a trained nurse whose former home was Roaring Springs and who isa graduate of the Roaring Springs hospital, was taken ill on Friday with the fever at Hastings where she is now located. —One of the richest gas strikes in the field about Delmont, was brought injon Saturday morning by the Pittsburg Plate Glass com. pany on the Hutton farm. When the drillers tapped the sand the pressure was so great that tools were blown out of the hole. No estimate could be ascertained at once as to its capacity bat the well is a corker. —During an electric storm in Schuylkill county, on Saturday, a lightning bolt fol- lowed the steel rails or an electric wire into A tunnel, 1,300 feet into the monutain side at Valley View in the western part of the coun- ty, where workmen are engaged conuecting two collieries of the Philadelphia and Read- ing Coal and Iron company. A charge of dynamite was exploded by the bolt and two men were killed. —Aun engineering corps of eighteen men | are stopping with Harry Law at Houtzdale, | Clearfield connty, snd are employed by the New York and Chieago Air Line making survey for that much talked of through main than foreign wages because American labor | It is | line at Sandy Ridge and working their way { across the mountains at that place and thence down to Sunbury, the point of their desting. | tion. This is the Ramsey railroad and they | seem to mean business now. | —It is estimated that berry pickers, mostly ¢hildren, picked and sold 12.000 quurts of | blackberries in the vicinity of Irwiu, West. ! moreland county, during the last few weeks. One firm purchased 8,000 quarts to turn into blackberry brandy. The berries vever before | grew in such profusion. The pickers were mostly children of foreign miners, and their | earnings added Inrgely to the family income. | which was running low on account of the slack work in the mines. { =—The Buffalo, Rochester aud Pittsburg | Railway company, through its attorneys, { Thomas H. Murray aud C. H. McCauley, filed a bill in equity in the prothouotary’s office against Clearfield county on Wednes- day, in which they ask that tbe provisions of the "Two Cent Bate Law” of April 5th, 1907, be declared void in so far as the said company is concerned, Service was at once accepted by county solicito? Liveright and the case was placed upon the list for trial. —Anna Peeler, the girl who was with Roy Warner, a former, Mill Hall boy,in the house at Bradford when he was shot and who re- ceived two wounds herself, has been held by the Bradford authorities charged with kill- ing the young man. When arrested in the Bradford lockup, where she was held on a trumped -up charge awaiting the verdict of the coroner's jury, she showed no signs of fear and does not appear to be worried about itin the least. She claims that Warner shot her and then shot him:elf. She was held without bail for the grand jury. There is a considerable difference of opinion as to the value of Williamsport real estate between the men who make the assess. ment for county purposes and the board of city assessors. In both cases the valuation is supposed to be based on what the property ought to bring at a fair public sale, but the valuation as fixed by the ward assessors for county purposes is nearly $4,000,000 less than the valuation placed on the properties by the city assessors. The total valuation by the city assessors was nearly $14,000,000, while the valuation on which county taxes will be levied is a little more than $10,000,. 000. —Clell Kissell, of Kissell’'s Springs, West. moreland county, was strolling along a mountain stream a few days ago when he spied a large and beautiful trout in the shal- low water. He knew it was not the season to capture trout but the beauty was €o large and tempting that he whipped out his revolver and shot it. The trout measured eighten inches and he carried it to Ligonier to show to some of his friends. While there some one made him a good offer and he sold it. Next some one informed the game war- den and he was arrested and taken before a Ligonier justice, where it cost him $49.80— $10 for shooting a trout, $10 for taking it out of season, $25 for selling it, and $4.80 for costs, —J. V. Thompson and I. W, Semans, of Uniontown, have closed the sale of 5.9288 acres of coal land in Mosgan and Washington townships, Greene county, for a reported consideration of $1,463,000, to men who are organizing the Emerald Coal company, iu- cluding Julian Kennedy, of Pittsburg; presi dent of the Orient Coke company ; R. C. Crawford, of McKeesport; James Henderson, of Charleroi, and Resid Kennedy, of Home- stead. The track adjoins both the Bessemer Coke company’s holdings and those of the Pittsburg- Buffalo company, which is estab- lishing an enormous coal and coke plant at in forming action. Mariana, It is announced that plans for opeuing mines and establishing coke ovens are well under way.