range in weight from 18 to 26 pounds each. ~—On her 21st birthday anniversary on Thursday, Miss Elizabeth Bowman, of Fare ragut, Lycoming county, opened a register- ed package and found $5,000 in crisp new billa from an aunt in Ohio, after whom she was named, —Emanuel Degler, while picking chest- | nuts on the Blue mountains, in Berks coun. ty. on Saturday, found a pocket book com- taining $13 in bank notes so badly decayed that the denominations could hardly be deciphered. —Plans have been prepared by the Uni- versal Portland Cement company, a sub- sidiary of the United States Steel corpora- tion, to double the capacity of its big slag plant, at Universal, Allegheny county, ata cost of $2,000,000. —While the members of the family of John Ulrich, of Bern township,sBerks coun~ ty, were husking corn in a field some dis- tance away from the house on Saturday,a thief entered the home and stole $30 in money and a gold watch. ~The recent forest fires in Mifflin county have caused the county commissioners te pay out $252.95, which amount was used to pay the fire fighters. The money was paid to the constables of the different townships Hil is iH £ i 1H : i : i him or he will be i ) at nothing to secure 4 ROSE is to flood the county with him on election day. If this prove true you will see its enoug It is also stated that Col. Hug S. TAYLOR, his er, has effected an organization for him in every precinct in the 3 If this is true you will see who they are and it might be well “to keep them in mind. They will represent the class that works under cover, but gets votes. All must be counteracted and if they are not, “then Centre county has no more ‘pride than one of the precincts in Philadelphia that Jim McNicHoL carries about in his vest pocket. We have told you that FRep Smith, candidate for Sheriff, is a su- Dp H g g | £28 i who is not blinded and in- pasty ris sit down with rag rE 108 Sou. rh oon- the ym on his neoes- living, recollectivg at the same very listle ae from this bave bad any office froma seat in the | Perior man, in every respect, to his opponent Mr. Huriey and invited | 39 per cet Jon =, Der | and they in turn paid the fighters. cabinet down to a revenue col it] your investigation in proof of the assertion, Mr. SiH is a farmer in | cent. ; oatmeal, 18 per cent, ; macaroni and | —The Rev. W. J. Houck, of Washington, D. C., who was recently appointed pastor of Allison Memorial United Brethren church, was locked out of the church on Sunday. The members say they have nothing against the new minister but they want their former pastor back. ~The Patriotic Order Sons of America presented two flags to the Lewistown public schools on Friday afternoon, the one flag being given to the Logan street schools and the other to the Toll Gate ~chools. There were exercises appropriate to the occasion at each of the schools. —Chas, 8. Schaubla, former city male car=- rier of Chambersburg, pleaded guilty in the U. 8. court in Scranton a few days ago to violating the postal regulations. He was sentenced to six months in jail and a fine of $150. The postman’s offense was taking money from letters to he carried in town. —The commissioners of Indiana county have granted orders to the amount of $203.65 to the constables acting as fire wardens of Cherryhill, Burrell and Banke townships, and their assistants, for extinguishing forest fires. The wardens are paid at the rate of 25 cents per hour and the assistants 20 cents. —After traveling over 5.000 miles to see his brother, A. L.. Wick, a retired banker, who is lying at the point of death at Greens ville hospital, William W. Wick, of Portland, Oregon, died at the Arlington hotel, in Greenville, early on Sunday morning, of cent. ; fish, 25 per cent. ; per cent. ; sugar, 70 per cent. napkins, 45 per cent. ; knives and forks, 60 per cent. ; cups and saucers and plates, 55 per cent. ; tinplate for kitchen utensils, 45 per cent. Clothing : Woolen cloths, 100 per cent. ; blankets, 100 per cens. ; flannels, 100 per cent. ; underwear of wool, 100 cent. ; dress goods for women and children, up- ward of 100 per ent. ; cotten cloths, from 40 to 60 per cents. Medicines : Calomel, 35 per cent. ; chloroform, 30 per cent ; morphia, $1 per ounce ; infants’ food, 20 per cent. ; phen- acetin and like coal-tar medicines, 25 per caus, ; chicory, 65 per cent. There is little thas escapes the tariff Molock, from infants’ food to the bread of labor and the wood in the poor man’s cof- fin. Yes the oracles of party when asked concerning the specific reform of sariff wrongs and abuses are dumb, while she Republican candidate for President coolly laims that the tariff duties ot 55 and per cent. on pottery are not quite enough for him. This, too, isthe on tariff schedule which he bas y and his position on it enables every intelli- gent man in the land to see how little tariff reform may be expected in that quarter. Should he be elected the result would be accepted by him and his adher- ents as the popular decree that the tariff of abominations shall be revised only in so far as its revision may put more unearned owe) into the pockets of the piratical rusts. he bad simply agreed to RoOSEVELT'S corrupt propositions in the interest of his proxy in order to promote the conspiracy which has for its object the establishment ola ot eae Rush township and Mr. HurLev is a liveryman in Philipsburg. Mr. Smite has lived in the county all of his life, while Mr. HURLEY has been a resident of the county only seven years, The one man has been proven by a life time of good citizenship among us. The other hasn't. “There should be no hesitancy about you voting for Smith. We have told you that Joun D. MILLER, candidate for County Treas- urer, is a man above reproach, singularly well qualified by nature and by. experience to fill the office he seeks. His ability has never been questioned because the public knows him. There is no reason why anyone should vote against him and many why everyone should. He is a farmer and represents that calling most typically. He is genial and courteous, not for the sake of getting votes, but always, and will make a splendid official. We have told you that GEo. W. WEAVER, candidate for Register, is a poor, one armed school teacher, so crippled up with rheumatism dur- ing the summer months that he was unable to make a thorough canvass of the county. There are not many things that a one armed man can do but'he ¢an do the work of F egister because he is grell educated, a good penman and has been justice of the peace in his district long enough to have an intimate knowledge of what legal papers look like and how they are kept. Mr. WEAVER has not made his campaign on the sympathy racket. No, no, he is too manly for that, Nevertheless here is a chance to help one who is afflicted and it can be done with- out working hardship to his opponent who already has a good business sould not be issued in any cases in which injunctions would not issue if no indus. trial disputes were involved.” There was | mothiag unfair or unjust in that but the | request. Subsequently Mr. GOMPERS asked | the Deuver convention to make such a declaration and to use his own language | “be gos all he asked for.” Under the sapport the Demooratic ticket and as an "Don’t tail to do your duty as a citizen | honorable mao faithful to the canse of and an honest man next Tuesday. There | labor be is doing it earnestly and effeotive- are many things that you should express | 1: your views on and the ballot is the only medinm through which you can express them. —This is the last word we will have The Canal Conspiracy. The New York World has been inveati- gating the parchase of the Panama caval with you before the election. For the hon. or of the county, for the good of the Com- monwealth and for the sake of your own conscience DON'T VOTE FOR TAYLOR for the Legislature. ~Do you want a good, christian farmer w bo has spent all his life in Centre county for Sheriff. Vote for SMITH. If you want a liveryman who bas been in the county only seven years and is likely & “ave away any minute vote for HURLEY. —If you want to vote to make JOE CAN NON again the vulgar and auntooratic boss of Congress vote for BARCLAY. BARCLAY is for CANNON, WALKER would be against him, therefor your duty as a christian man is to vote for WALKER. ‘DUNLAP and WEAVER have earned their re-election. The oondition of the county treasury proves that. They bave paid off a $41,000.00 debt and have a sar- plus in the treasnry. If yon area prastio- al man you will approve of that. Vote the way your approbation points. —Dr. P. 8. FISHER has made as good a coroner as Centre county ever had and that is the reason why he should be re- elected. He i¢ making vo canvas of the county for the chief reason that he is too busy to do so. Then it ought not be neo- essary, either. He was elected by a good majority three years ago and there is no reason why he should not be this year. In fact, there is every reason to believe he will. Therefore, don’t fail to vote for FISHER when voting the Demoocratio tickes, «——Figuring from their poll of the ‘county the Republican organization in this place is claiming the county for TAFT by about two hundred majority while conced- ing that WALKER will carry it by from two to four hundred majority. On the other hand ' the Democratic organization claims the county for the entire Demoorat- io ticket by miajorities ranging from five hundred to one thousand. And this claim is made only after a carefal canvas of all the voters. Bat to make the viciory sure - every Democrat in the county must turn out and vote. Don's think the battle al- ready won and that it does not matter whether you vote or not, for it does, It was just snch over-confidence that lost - the Democrats the Sheriff and Register three : years ago and it is something that must notjoconr again. Go to the polls yourself and eee that every other Democrat in your precinot gets there. This is the only’ way we can hope fo win, vad with resalts that are startling. The full measure of the iniquity has not been re- vealed for the reason that the evidence bas been shown to prove frauds far greater than those connected with the building and furnishing of the State capitol at Har- rishurg, prodigious as those looting opera- tions were. But what is of even greater significance it is practically proved, not- withstanding the absence of the most ma- terial evidence, that the ROOSEVELT and TAFT families are both involved and equal- ly culpable. The trail of corruption has led direct to the White House. Is will be remembered that the negotia- tions between the government and the so- called French Panama canal company were conducted by WiLrLiam C. CROMWELL, of New York. It now appears that Crod- WELL bad bought up the shaies of the Freoch Panama canal company at a nomi- nal figure, something like $10,000,000, and subseqaently sold them to the goveromen$ for $40,000,000. Of this sum $10,000,000 went to GEORGE R. SHELDON, the present treasurer of the Republican National com- mittee, an equal sum to reimburse CROM- WELL for bis purchase of the stock and another eq sum as ‘‘velvet”’ to Mr. CrOMWELL. That left $10,000,000 and a considerable part of that was divided be- tween President ROOSEVELT'S brother-in- law and Judge TAFT’S brother. Soon after the consummation of this deal General Davis, of the United States army, was appointed to the head of the canal commission and dispatched to the Isthmus to superintend the work. He soon discov- ered the conspiracy between CROMWELL and SHELDON and forwarded a detailed re- ports of their operations to Washington. The result was that his report was sent back by Secretary of War TA¥T for correc tion and after the second report was sub- mitted he was removed from office by the President. Soon afterward the documents and other evidences of the transaction were abstracted from the archives of the govern. ment and the connection of ROGSEVELT'S and TA¥?'S relations with the fraud thas concealed. . ~The one sure way for the Democrats to win at the polls next Tnesday is to get out the vote, Every Democrat should make it his duty to not only go to the polls himself but see that his Democrato neigh- bors go. We can’t win, mind you, by stay- ing at home. While we are doing that er fellows are turning ous solidly for their ticket. So don't let there be any stay-at-homes. If he eathiae is dw agreeable, you can e eleotion lose no time on farm. And if the weather is fair, so much the better. In any event, don's fail to vote. enterprise of his own. We have told you that F. Pierce Musser is far and away the better man for the office of Recorder than Mr. Brow~ and refer you to an article in another column of this issue for the proof. We have told you that Messrs. DunLap and WEAVER, candidates for Commissioner, have in three years converted a county debt into a county surplus and invited your examination of the books in the com- missioner’s office in substantiation of the statement. They have been faithful to the trust imposed in them three years ago and more than made good the promises they gave. The county needs prudent, prac- tical men to take care of the business of that office and if paying a debt of $41,000.00 at the same time that other necessary expenses were increasing is not evidence of practical and prudent administration then we don’t want you to vote for them. y But if you honestly think it is, it is your duty to give them a second term in the office they have conducted so well. We have told you that Dr. Fisuer has made a good Coroner and that should assure you that he will make a good one again, if re- elected. You may think that the coroner’s office is an unimportant one and that anyone can fill it. This is not the case. The fact that there is little to do there often prompts men to neglect a case when it does turn up. Dr. FisHER is not the kind of a man to neglect such a duty and you should vote for him. We have told you that Messrs. Beck and CoLk, candidates for Audi- tor, are clean, honest men well equipped for the office and deserving your support. They are farmers and should receive the recognition their good character warrants. All these things we have tolc you in time for the opposition to con- tradict or prove unture. a single charge proven untrue. Not a single statement has been refuted, not Now, when it is too late to fairly ad- vance any other arguments, we stand on those already presented and appeal to your honest judgment. Don’t you think this ticket, taken collectively or separately, is better in every respect than its opposition. It represents. a better qualified class of men than is often named on one ticket for county officers and as such we appeal for the kind of loyal, working support it deserves. Get to the polls. Get your friends to the polls and on the way tell them what you know of all the candidates. If you do that and you and they have the interest of the county at heart we know what the result will be. ——In making up your ticket next Taes- day dou’s forget to vote for BECK and COLE for Auditors. Itie important that we have the best men in those offices. Messrs. BECK and COLE are both good men ; farmers who are competent to go over accounts and in. terested enough as ere to dig into and find ont just what we all want to Kaoy about where the county money goes ——Don’t take any stock in the ‘‘last card’’ and ‘‘roorhack” stories sprung on the eve of the election, no matter who they are about. It stands to reason that such stories are always merely campaign lies. If they were otherwise they would be told in time to prove them either true or false. So pay no attention to them. ~—Sabsoribe for the WATCHMAN. apoplexy, about two hours after he had ar. Mr. Roosevelt at Large. From the Pittsburg Post. e Mr. Roosevelt, trom his headquarters in the White House, hurle what he must con- sider a terrific bombshell againge writ of injunction. Manifestly he begged an official of the Brotherhood of Railway Traivmen to ask him a question, that he might have provocation to inflict ano.uer stump letter npon the people, This query concerns a court decision by the United States circnit court at Milwaukee in the ‘‘summer of 1906,” and its bearing ia en- tirely apon a watter affecting the Iron | Molders’ unpion. It would be wholly | supeiflnons to enter into the details of the case. The controlling notion is that My. Roosevelt does not agree with the first opinion, and that the appellate court over- raled the decision. Sunoh things often | happen in the coarse of litigation, but does it as often ocour that the President of the United States crosses the well-defined line of bis province to criticise the jodical views of judges, appointed and confirmed, be- cause of their competency, especially when his legal ignorance is so perfectly known ? The main purpose of his latest soreed is to inform labor that a higher court reversed the decree of a lower one, and that Mr, | K Tate was highly indignant all through the | © controversy. Mr. Taft was at this partio- ular time secretary of war, engaged in settling the Brownsville matter and the Colonel Stewart retirement, and possibly the sale of the Panama canal for $40,000,- | & rived and before he got to see his sick broth r. —Miss Susan Walker, Greencastle's oldest resident, celebrated her ninety third birth- what be | day lust Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Helen bas himself confessed to be the abuse of the | J. Strickler, North Carlisle street. Miss Walker still enjoys wonderfully good health nd actively engages in housework. Dar- ing her long life time it is said she has never been confined to ded with illness a single day. —Peter White, of Cogan Station, Lycoming county, drove off a bridge across Lycoming reck Wednesday of last week, and was found dead beneath his overturned wagon. White is believed to have been asleep, as the bridge from which the conveyance fell isa street railway bridge. The horse had taken to this, unguided. He was 40 years of age nd unmarried. —The close of last week witnessed the cessation of operations on the great power dam on the Susquehanna river at McCall's Ferry. About 100 men were at work, and only enough of these will be kept there to take care of the machinery and look after the plant. With fully 60 per cent. of the reat plans finished, there is little prospect { an early resumption of operations. ~~ Actually scared to death by a peddler, Mrs. A. O. Bianch died Sunday at her home in 8t. Clair, near Pottsville. The peddler, foreigner, when she refused to buy from 000 to “‘friends.’”” What bad he to do with | him, attempted to force his way into her a cours case in Milwaukee ? He abandoned the henoh to submit to she artificial stufl- ing of a taxidermist. b More Hearst Charges. From the Harrisburg Star-Independent., Governor Haskell sned William Ran- dolph Hearst for libel because the New Yorker charged bim with Standard Oil offences. Hearst made similar accusations against other men, hut the Governor was the ouiy man with sufficient courage to prosecute. A few would not make an denial. Not even Foraker, fighter though L* be, accepted conrageously the challenge w ich was carried in the Hearst letter- Jcadings. The New Yorker now comes agaia into the limelight, with letters that, in their allegations, smiroh the official and persona! reputation of former Governor Stone, Judges Henderson and Morrison ; and of the Hon. John P. Elkin, the ‘Indiana lowboy,’’ protege and would-be rival of ator Quay, then Attorney General of Pennsylvania and now Judge of the Supreme court of this State. The reading of those letters constitutes the publication of a libel, if the contents are libelions. The mere fact of his refrain- fog from making a attack Mou the gentlemen named does not , Hearst. If the gentlemen feel that they have been libeled it is their duty $o pros. eoute him. They cannot remain silent. home several days ago. Fear of bodily harm to her was so great that she was prostrated y the shock, which caused her death. She was 38 years old and leaves a husband and family. —0On Wednesday atfernoon Ferd Briel, of Karthaus, Clearfield eounty, aged 13 years, accompanied Charles Meeher, a neighbor boy, to deliver some groceries at Pine Glen to a customer of Merchant J. A. Henderson. Ferd took a gun slong expecting to shoot ¥ | some game along the way. They saw none and on their return trip, when near home, the gun was accidentally discharged, the load entering Ferd’s body and killing him instantly. ~The spurting up of oil where the Ahrens Coustruction company are digging to lay the new sewers of the Hontingdon system, along the Pennsylvania railroad tracks, between Second street and Stone creek, Huntinrdon, last week, has created quite a little excite= ment among some and an interest in general among those who have seen the oil or heard of its finding. But it is not likely that any gushers will develop, as it is believed that the loss of oil from several large tanks some years ago, and the leakage of some pipes at the Huntingdon Gas company’s plant, which uses considerable crude oil, have caused the presence of the oil in the earth.