—— ——— TT ————— 2) Demorad tpan, | BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings, ~The fair is about over. election. —Don’t let any one talk you out of a conscientions determination to vote for Bryan. —A vote for SaiTH for Sheriff is a vote to put a plain, honest reputable farmer in that office. —Piteshurg lost the National league base- ball championship by a nose and not a very Roman one at thas. —WEAVER and DUNLAP have made good Commissioners. When men bave made good they should be encouraged. Vote for WEAVER and DUNLAP. —GEORGE WEAVER is a poor school teach- er with only one arm. He is just as fis for the office of Register as Mr. TUTEN and needs it worse. Help WEAVER. — FRED SMITH is 8 man about whom no one says anything bat good. He is astar- dy farmer of the cleverest kind and would make an excellent Sheriff. Won't you support him. ~The human heart weighs from eight to twelve ounces, but thereare lots of them thas seem bigger, bat none of the local Re- publican leg-pullers count Congressman BARCLAY'S in that class. —Don’t wake avy deals. Let that all for the TAYLOR, BROWN, HURLEY ocombi- nation. They are trying to deal all the rest out and themselves in and the other fellows are beginning to get wise. —Now it is said that we might all live $0 be as old as METHUSALEH, if we take the proper care of ourselves. What's the use. Is seems that long, anyway, to the fellow who failed to find his affinity. — Vote for Musser for Recorder and be sure that the office is to be filled by a ca- pable man. Take no chavces on incompe- tency, the court records are too precious for that, besides some of your own business mighs suffer. —They actually tell us that FINK doesn’s know that he is licked for Treasur- er. Why, bless your soul, GEORGE, JorNNy MILLER had thas office cinched a month ago. The people decided that long ago, and you're too late. —Founders week in the State’s greatest eastern city, Sesqui-centennial in the State’s greatest western city and the Fair in the State’s greatest central town looks as though Penosylvania ought to have enough to amuse her this week. —You needn’t take anybody’s word for it if yon don’t want to. Just eend to the commissioner’s office and get a copy of the statement published three years ago and the oue published last March and compare them. That will tell youn why you should re-elect DUNLAP and WEAVER. —It is not a personal master, nor one of friendship. Every honest voter should he for MEYER for the Legislature, whether you regard him as a friend or otherwise. You are not voting for MEYER personally, you are voting to have an intelligent, able man represent yon in a place wher2 brains aod ability count. Next, the ~The election is not a month off now and everyone wants to get busy, especial ly those who are interested in sending a man to Harrisharg who can properly rep- resent us in the Legislature. We want MEYER, but it will take work to help him win over the inflaences that are back of TAYLOR, so we urge all his friends to get busy. —Dr. FREAR, of The PennsylvanviajState College, recently discussed eighty-three kinds of breakfast foods he tested for the government and said : ‘‘Most of them were very good.” If the Doctor really sampled them all State might be having in ber corps of scientists just now a Sunny BiLL who mighs rival she breakfast food king ‘‘Sunny Jim.” — Look aronnd yon and see who the peo- ple are who are knocking on DUNLAP and WEAVER and we will show you a sore head. No one can take exception to their conduct of the Commissioner’s office conse- quently the few fellows who are again them either wanted something they were not entitled to or are mad becanse some one else than their particular favorite got fu appointment or a county job. —No doubt you have passed over lightly the WATCHMAN'S declaration, made a number of times within the pass year, that ROOSEVELT is trying to wake a close corporation of our government, il not an absolute monarchy. We have seen that ambition in bis every move for the past four years and frequently called attention to the dangers of his repeated usurpation of power. Possibly you didn’s think there was much in it If you didn’t we would like to ask yon what you think of the an- nouncement of the Hon. NicHornAs LoNG- WORTH, member of Congress, and Presi- dent ROOSEVELT'S son-in-law, made at Rock Island, Iii, on Friday? In the course of a political speech there he said the pian is to have TAFT for President the next eight years and then pnt RoosEvVELT in for eight years more. The impudence of the declaration is only exceeded by the daring of the men who have conceived the plan. It would practically mean sixteen years of ROOSEVELT in the presidential chair, for ROOSEVELT is TAFT'S master, and after sixteen years he would have the country beaten into such servility thas it would be easy for him to continue in pow- erat will. You don’t need to take our word for it now. You have the word of one of the President's own family. Roosevelt's Unpaitriotic Ambition. The President’s son-in-law, Congressman “Dick LONGWORTH, revealed the reasons for ROOSEVELT'S frenzy of avxiety for the election of TAPT, in a speech delivered at | Rook Island, Illinois, a few days ago. LONGWORTH who is old enough to be trusted with family secrets and prominent enongh to be a member of the committee on Ways and Means of the Hoose of Rep- resentstives, told his audience that the present plaus of the fawily contemplate two terms in the Presidency for TAFT and at the expiration of that time, the- re-election of RoosEveir. If they can't Mexioanize the government within thas period of time noder such circumstances, they bave lost their cunning beyond ques- tion. Mr. LONGWORTH’S announcement oreat- ed a good deal of consternation in official circles at Washington and a day or two after the evens, he denied it. ‘‘The pur- pose is to re-elect TAFT and at the expira- tion of his second term the country will look to some other State for a President, probably New York,’ he declares is what he said. He adde that the audience and not he suggested ROOSEVELT. Bat the re- porters of the metropolitan newspapers who were present agreed in their report. They are among the brightest of the news. paper correspondents of the country and e chances are that the perpetration of so {fine oh a blunder as misquoting the Presi- dent’s son-in-law on such a subject would cost them their jobs. It may be assumed, therefore, that Con- gressman LONGWORTH revealed a state as well as & family secret when he told of the plans, or it might better he character- ized as the conspiracy, of the President to Mexicanize the government. Everybody who reasons at all knows what the effect of restoring ROOSEVELT to the White House would be. Everybody who thinks at all knows how reluctantly he surrenders she power even to the proxy he has chosen to keep the seat comfortable. It will be recalled that more than six months ago when opposition to TAFT threatened to defeat his plan, he declared tbat he would yield to no other and that ‘if they didn’t take TAFT they would have to take him,” RoosgveLr. ROOSEVELT meant that il he ever meant anything in bis life. He doesn’t want to relinquish the power of the Presidency and he doesn’t intend so do so permanently. He covets power as a savage animal covets flesh and he intends to bold to it as long as he can. TAFT has consented to serve as his proxy fora time and when by exoes- sive taxation the people are sufficiently impoverished and by the exercise of favor- itism the army and wavy have been made sufficiently tractable, he will claim control, not for a tern or two, bus for life, and he will transmit the power to his sons whom he is training to the truoulenoy that is necessary to carry out his nefarious schemes. ROOSEVELT is not a patriot as many well meaning people think. Heis ambitious for empire and will yield bis bopes only when he has to. Centre va. Blair, It Centre county people want a Blair county man to act as Sheriff for them they will elect W. E. HUurLeEy. He has lived and voted in this county but seven years, and we presume that if horse trad- ing about Philipsharg should prove un- profitable he would pall up stakes any day and go back to Blair county, where his real iuterests are. On the other hand Mr. FRED F. SMITH is a native of the county. He has made his living by honest and hard work on his farm in Rash township, since he was a boy. He has been a tax-payer in this county for over twenty-five years, and if farmers in this county are to be cousidered as deserv- ing as horse jockeys and speculators, Mr. SMITH should certainly receive the support of every voter wha thinks so. Personally Mr. HURLEY may be all right bot he would bave a much strooger claim for the sapport of Centre county voters if he had ever done anything to deserve that support or had lived in thé county long ecough to be classed ae one of its people. —-The tax-pager in Centre county who has his own andthe county’s interest at heart is just as certain to cast bis vote for DUNLAP and WEAVER as he is to go to the polls on November 3rd. These two officials have paid off almost the entire debt that a Republican board of Commissioners had fastened upon the county ; have paid up the balance due on the soldiers monument; have reduced the actual ruvning expenses of the county over sen thousand dollars per year, and bave stopped all the extrava- gance, profligacy and grafting that oharao- terized the management of that office under Republican control. They bave been mod- el officials and the tax-payer who votes to put e2w and antried men in that office, and [fails to recognize the good work that the present board has accomplished, is neither just to himself nor fairto people of the county. ! unknown to us. STATE RIGHTS AN The government statisticians, State and National, are busy these days, juggling fig- ures to prove an amazing measure of pros perity throughout the country, notwith- standing the evidences to the contrary. These gentlemen are well paid public of- ficials whose business it is to perform pab- lic duties. Bat they are working at pub- lic expense creating political capital for the Republican party and perverting official in- formation to deceive the people. In most oases their cooked statistics are conveyed to the public at the expense of the Associated Press and other news agencies. In every instance they prostitute the public service besides misrepresenting ihe facts concern- ing whioh shey write. For example the government at Wash- ington recently issued a bulletin which purports to give valuable statistios in rela. tion to savings banks throughout the coun- try. It was prepared by government clerks in the office of the Comptroller of the Cur- rency and alter a comprehensive summa- ry bad been sent out by the press assooia- tion the entire balletin was distributed through the mails unller the frank of the treasury department. The purpose of the balletin is to show that the loss in savings bank deposits on account of the panio is, comparatively speaking, tnfling. To ac- complish that result these bogus stasissi- cians have been compelled to resort to de- ception but they have not besitgted to do 80. Almost simultaneously the Bureau of La- bor statistios of she Department of Internal Affairs at Harrisburg issued a bulletin oov- ering the manufacturing interests of the State in which the highest measure of pros- perity is claimed. Both are dishonest, of course, and that emavatiog from Harris burg is the worst of the two. It compares the record of 1907 with that of 1906 and as the panic came toward the evd of 1907, in the midst of anexampled prosperity, the comparison is more than favorable, it is flattering. The Washington bulletin rus into 1908 only as far as May and covers the prosperous period of 1907. It shows only a trifling loss in deposite from the savings banks because they had not been hit much up to that time. The campaign managers who are steering these bogus statisticians in their operations must imagine that the average voter is an imbecile if they believe that he can be fool- ed by soch rubbish as these bulletins con- tain. The panic of lass fall was bardiy per- ceptible until about the holidays, thoagh it began with the failure of the Kniokerbock- er Trust company in New York, in Octo- ber, and though industry was paralyzed by the first of May, the savings bank deposits had scarcely been touched up until that time. Men who have savings bank ac- connts withstand a considerable period of idleness before they draw on their reserves, Since May, however, deposits have been reduced vasly and the manufacturing in- duetries have suffered immensely since the flush times of 1907. —Dr. KocH, the German scientist who discovered the tubercle bacillus, declares that the tuberculosis of cows and the tu- bercalosis of human kind are not the same, hence the deduosion that it can not he contracted by drinking the milk or eating the flesh of affected cattle. All the other scientists of the world seem to be arrayed against KocH’s theory, but he was on the job first and his opinion ought to he worth something at all events. Vote for the Man Who Deserves a If Mr. EARL TUTEN, either before his election or since, has ever done a thing for his party or for any individual, other than try to look pleasant and mysterious, it is As a nonentity, either in politics or business, or anything that enti- tles a man to be of some importance in something, he would draw the prize. Why then should any one vote for him in pref- erence to the one armed, hard working, honest citizen, G. F. WEAVER. At home Mr. WEAVER, crippled as he is, has earned for himself a position among its foremost citizens, while Mr. TUTEN, with all his opportunities and advantages, amounts to uo more in the public life of Bellefonte than if he had never been born. Mr. TUTEN has certainly hgd all that a Democratic county shonld give him. ——Dr. P. 8. Fisagr. for Coroner, should bave an easy time being elected this fall. His term of two years has been one of the most economic of any coroner in the county, while he has been very efficient in rendering good service. The voters of the county, irrespective of politics, should see that he is re-elected. ——There is nothing to fear in support- ing BRYAN this year. If he wanted to he couldn’s make times much worse and we have a sort of suspicion that his election would make them much better, ——Thomas Howley last week parohas- ed the stock and fixtures of the Marion Supply company, on Bishop street, and is now running a grooery of his own. D FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE PA, OUTOBERS, 1008, Republican Prosperity in Chicago, Fifteen thousand school children starv- ing in Chicago is she startling annoance- ment made in she daily newspapers of Chicago and which has brought gloom and consternation to the managers of she Re- publican national committee in shat city. They have been preaching prosperity and the “‘full dinner pail” shrough she con- tinuance of the Republican party in power and the maintenance of a high tariff. The Republican newspapers of Chicago without exoeption have given this Republican claim the lie direct. In publishing with big headlines the report of the special com- mittee appointed so investigate the condi- tions in public schools, they show that thousands of children are suffering from hunger and actually dying from starva- tion in that great industrial and commer- cial city. Here are the headlines running across three coluamuos of she Chicago J=fer-Ocean a Republican paper of the rabid kind ; “Hunger Menaces 20,0000 Pupils in City Schools ; Many Beg Refuse to Eat.” “Siaciling soudisious in Citieago Shows by re nvestigating mittee, 0 Fiod Starvation Has Maoy Victims,” 45,000 Have No Meal in Morning.” “Body Asks Food for Children, Some of Whom Have Forgotten Taste of Batter, Living on Dry Crusts Earned by Hero. of Mothers, Who Go to Bed Fast. ing.” . The Tribune, another leading Republi- oan journal of that city, heads its article : ‘‘Huonger Stalking io City Schools.” ‘Five Thousand Pupils Don’s Know What a Fall Meal Means and Ten Thousand Others are Underfed.” The Inter Ocean begins the horrible story telling of the starving of the little opes in the midst of ‘Republican Prosperity’ with the following : “Five thousand children often go to school breakfastiess. Fully fifteen thousand school children of Chicago are ander-fed and babitually hungry, Mothers go to bed in order shat sheir children may have food in she morning. Half clad and crying children have heen found on the streets begging dead fowls and rotten fruis to eat.” These are some of the statements in the report on indigent children filed with the school management committee of the board of “ducation. : Summarizing the canses which produce the conditions of hunger the Tribune cites, “lack of employment,’ and the ‘‘constant inorease in the cost of living without a cor- responding increase in wages’' as the chief reasons for the horrors, Among vumerouns instances of suffering it gives the following : “In Armoar school district—Father out of work, mother sick ; not a scrap of food in the hoase; five children, three half naked and one garbed only in undershirt, eryiog for bread. For three days they had lived on tea,—no bread, milk, or sugar. In Jenner school district—Oune moth- er sapports a family of four children ou §1°50 a week sewing paute, In Drammond school disérict—Fam- ily of seven, No food in the house. Father out of work. Went to lake to commit suicide, but changed his mind and committed misdemeanor in order to be locked up and get prison meal. In Sonthwestern district—Family of #ix fonnd hungry, almost crazed by lack of food. Had lived five days on bread and water, and last loaf has heen eaten for breakfast, And these are only a few of the many thousands of similar cases reported. And Chicago is only one of the scores of larger cities in the country that are feeling the effects of the Republican panic and Re- publican rule. It is to that party that this condition, with its distress and suffering, and help- lessness is chargeable. 1t has now and has bad for vears control of every department of the government, and while the good Lord has blessed the country with a full. ness of everything that man needs, it has by legislation so controlled the distribution of that which should be within the reach of every one, that only the few have plenty, while the many are without the common. est comforts or necessaries of life. And yet there are those who have the effrontery to ask the continuation in pow- er of the party that has brought the coun- try to the condition that the starving thousands of our people show it to be in. Honest voter do you not think it time to make a change ? —— EMANUEL KLEPPER, of Philadel- phia, was in town shis week and a more rampant BRYAN man yon never heard. A BRYAN man from Philadelphia is a nov. elty, but EMANUEL is quite a successful contractor down there and must know what he is talking abont when he says they are going to oarry the 41st ward of that city for the Great Commoner. He has made a number of canvasses, personally, and says he can scarcely believe himself the wonderful change of sentiment to De- mooracy. All of which we hope will be justified by the results in November, but however that may be EMANUEL’S Centre county friends have the assurance that this year Phifadelphians are awake and work- ing for the great cause that we are all so much interested in. {| tor the people of the country to From the Pittsburg Post. During the intermittent a ppearances in these latter days Mr. Tals is permitted hy his master to make, she traits of sabeer- vience and vacilliation are exhibited even more distivos detail. Before Congress adjourned Mr. Bryan asked Mr. Tales co-operation to indace that body to enact a campaign fond publicisy law. Republi. can organs chuckled because a Tals letter to ex-Senasor Chandler was disclosed wherein the candidate ostensibly indorsed the idea. Bya 9 to 1 majority the steam roller convention crushed she notion. In bis itifiostion Spesth Mr. Tals taseried again his personal favor toward publicity hefore election. Now he is saddenly con- verted, the scales fall from his eyes on his way, not to Damascus but to Kausas, and he accepts meekly the twisting argument in spawils from the Keystone. ~In the small mining town of White Station, Indiana county, there are fifteen cases of typhoid fever ; in Homer City there are seven cases of scarlet fever, and in Salts- burg there are a number of cases of diph- theria. ~Miss Deborah Belles, aged 80 years, living alone near Harmony, Butler county, was drugged by two men who entered her home on Saturday night, as she slept. They took $400 in money, besides nearly all her clothing. ~The Altoona Construction and Supply company began the erection of the uew Lock Haven hospital at Lock Haven on Monday. General Mauager Frank Brandt is in charge of the work, and hopes to have the structure under roof by December 1st. —Esarly Monday morning the residence of the Rev, T. 8. Wilcox, district superintendent of the Williamsport district of the Methodist Episcopal church in Williamsport, was en- tered for the second time within a few weeks by burglars, but they were heard by mem- bers of the family and fled without taking anything. —A fierce fire raged at Ebensburg early Monday morning. The Central Hotel, the two-story general building owned by Mr. Shields, the two-story mercantile structure owned by Biggs Hassoun and the three story residence of C. F. Roberts were destroyed. The firemen had a very weak stream of water owing to the low condition of the water supply. The loss is estimated at $25, of Mr. Roosevelt, so generally denounced | 000 by the press. Does this give the world as- surance ofa man, a man who bas that Horatian quality; ‘‘tenacity of purpose ?"’ He is like clay in the potter’s hands. At Bath, Me., he made a speech hreath- ing the very essence of redaction of tariff duties, though his chief had kept a tomb- like silence for seven years, except when he advised Mr. Watson, of Indiana, in 1906 to stand pat. Now that Senator Crane is trust agent as headquarters and “Sunny Jim’ Sherman oootrols the dominans Cannon wing of the campaign, Mr. Tals spasmodically becomes an arrant stand. and endorses even that socialistio tasy of a government guarantee of rea sonable profits. Always the opportunism of the man bred to desk routine, $o hum- ble bowing, without e of positive opinion or steadfastnes« in its maintenance. The acce of the nomination achieved as it was, the vaocilliation shownon the stump, the pitiable ignorance of political facts, 80 sharply rebuked by evea his own partisans, reveal a Taft that none can dub statesman. . x —— Unloading Caution, From the Altoona Times, : Repudiation by shree Republican aspi rants for congress in Iowa of Speaker Joseph G. Cannon is indicative of the in- oreasing hostility to his re-election to a position which he has used to stifle the will of the people. ‘‘Uncle Joe’ is a load that has hecome almost soo heavy for his party to shoulder, and it need not be sur- prising if sufficient opposition develops to curh Bis Srvapsion ik Sadi regal power, A bitter struggle is being waged against Speaker Canncn in his Illinois district, bat he is so firmly entrenched that his oppon. ents Smpais of accomplishing his over- throw, e next bess thing, therefore, is dd ind of aspirants for congressional honors an un- equivocal pledue thas they, if elected, will not vote for his re-election as speaker, should the calamity of his retarn to con- gress again be visited upon she vation. No Republican who is in accord with President Roosevelt can hold admiration for *‘Uncle Joe.” He consistently and determinedly opposed measnres advocated by the ohief executive, and stood firm against every relief demanded by the peo- ple. He is the representative of special interests, a practical, scheming politician, the antithesis of the ideal public servant. Every voter ought to make plain to suppliants for his soffrage his estimate of Speaker Cannon and urge that he not be re elected to the speakership. As long as he oconpies this position there is little reason to expect that congress will be re- sponsive to the popular will. A law unto himself. his pleasure paramount to every other consideration, and regarding the peo- ple as mere dumb driven cattle, “Uncle Joe” is eufficientiy powerful and sufficient- ly uuscrupulons to block the most right- eons and moss urgently-needed measures relieving the oppressions from which the masses are suffering. Taft's Burchard, From the Washington (Pa,) Record, Blaine had his Burchard aud Taft has his Longworth. As a sequel to the manner in whioh President Roosevelt used the power of his office for the nomination of Taft for president and bas since the nomi- nation descended from the high position of the exalted office which he holds to the level of a politician, dragging his dignity in political filth, come: Mickey Longworth, the bushand of Alice, and predicts that they will keep Taft in the presidential chair for eight years and then the Taft in- fluence as president will be used to reseat Teddy. Thus the Teddy dynasty will be preserved for 24 years. [In ihe light of this revelation the peculiar conduct of the pres- ident becomes significant, — Happy Over the Prospect, From the Huston Texas Post. In this heantifnl sunkissed, dew spang- led, zephor-swept Sabbath morning, when the good Lord aud all his radiant angels are with us in Heavenly Houston—the city of Athens—it ie a sweetly solemn thought that, after wondering in the wilderness for years, the serene and saintly Democrats may now trudge up the purple slopes of Pizgah and view the Promised Land where ripening postoffices, juicy oollectorships, sebaceous consulships and other glorious fruits await the coming invasion.” Ee —— —— “The Small Boy" in Fighting Trusts, From the Indianapolis News, Attorney General Bonaparte admits that he is ‘‘the small boy’ in the fight against the Trusts. The country would never have called Lim that. But now that he himself puts it that way, we suppose it can be taken by consent. At any rate we do not recall any Trust that has really been busted. And certainly no truster of them all bas ever been put behind the bars. It is so hard, so impossible, as Mr. Bonaparte eays, to get evidence ! ~——Now be honest ! Did you ever see a nicer, cleaner more interesting little fair in all your life than we are having right here in Bellefonte this year ? ~The twenty-fifth annual reunion of the survivors of the One Hundred and Tenth regiment, Pennsylvania volunteer infantry, will be held in Tyrone, Friday, October 16th. Any information desired in connection with the same can be had by writing to the sec- retary, G. W. Buck, Altoona, who will fur- nish any that may be desired. Preparations are under way to make the reunion one of the best yet held. —The fears of the people of Burnham, Lewistown and vicinity, that the steel works at Burnham would be removed, are quieted by a letter from the office of the firm in Philadelphia, which says that “There is no truth whatever in the reports that we have any intention of moving the works, selling out or otherwise changing the present ad. ministration of the Standard Steel works company of Burnham. —When Douglass J. Hyer, proprietor of the Greensburg Fish and Poultry market on Pennsylvania avenue, in Greensburg, pried open a clam on Tanrsday an immense white pearl popped out and fell at his feet. The stone is almost three-fourths of an inch long and fully a half inch wide, weighing forty grains. It is worth at a low estimate about $200. Local jewelers say it is the most per- fectly formed gem of the kind they have ever seen. —Murphy & Maloney, a law firm of Sydney, Australia, are asking for informa- tion concerning the whereabouts of Michael Crowley, a man said to have been employed by the Western Union Telegraph company between Altoona and Harrisburg several years ago. Crowley formerly resided in Australia and is wanted by the law firm in order that the estate of a deceased sister may be settled, Crowley being entitled to an in- terest in it. —Fishermen are having great sport at the chute of the river dam at Williamsport these nights gigging for eels. Monday night one man, secured eighty-four, another one seven. ty-two,and still others sixty-two, forty-seven and thirty. Bushels of them are earried away every night. The chute is dry in its lower course and the eels come over the brink of the dam and are left high and dry as the water gets away through the cracks in the planking. —It is said that one of the largest brick plants in Central Pennsylvanin is to be es- tablished at Graziarville,just west of Tyrone, by the Peunsyivania Pressed Brick Co., that company having purchased large tract of land st that place and intending to begin oper. ations just as sooa as the necessary buildings and furnaces can be built. The operations will cover an area of two acres and will be devoted to the manufacture of a fine quality of shale paving brick. —Constable W. L. Joyce, of Penfield, Clearfield county, presented a bill for $1,179 to the county commissioners last Thursday morning for services of men whom he had employed fighting forest fires in Husten township during the past month. The com- missioners have already paid out about $1,500 and when the bills are all in it is thought the total cost for fire fighting this fall will amount to nearly $3,000. The state will re« imbnrse the county two-thirds of the amount expended. ~Last Tuesday evening an attempt was made to destroy the barn on the Kratzer farm, at Keewaydin, Clearfield county ; the mules and cows were turned out of the stable and the torch applied in three places in the stable, which soon caught the hay overhead. William Price, who lives in the farm house, heard the mules out in the yard, went out to investigate and was not a minute too soon, for the fire was beginning to get headway. An alarm was sounded and by prompt assist. ance the fire was soon extinguished. —A contract for extensive repairs and ime. provements to the High street Methodist Episcopal church in Williamsport was awards ed on Thursday night und work will be started this week. The contract involves the remodeling of the building, painting inside and out, papering, new pews installed, new carpets for both the auditorium and base- ment, and the erection of a tower, the build- ing of an alcove for the pulpit on the south aside of the building and the removal of a partition and gallery on the north side. ~The most important financial merger in the history of Westmoreland county has just been consummated in Greensburg in the con solidation of the Barclay Trust company and the Westmoreland Saviogs and Trust com. pany, which went into effect on Thursday, October 1st. Thus the oldest and one of the strongest banking houses in Westmoreland county and one of the youngest and biggest become merged into the Barclay.Westmore- land Trust company. The consolidated com- pany will be conducted in the present quar- ters of the Barclay Trust company. The Barclay - Westmoreland Trust company leaps into the front ranks of financial institutions, with a capital of $400,000, surplus of $300,000 and total resources of $2,500,000,