———————— a — i ——————" Bemoreaic Walden 8Y P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings, Did you get your share of the white meat yesterday or did some oue else do the oarv- ing? —JoBN D. ROCKERFELLER on the wit. ness stand makes a spectacle very like a pious old fraud. —Pity us poor Democrats! Il CARNEGIE succeeds in having his party filch free trade from us what will there be left to stand on? —*“There are more important things than amassing money,’’ says JOHN D. ROCKER- FELLER. One of them in his life probably was dodging subpoena servers. — After all which is best, the filty cent dollar that bought one hundeed cents worth of provisions or the dollar that buys only twenty-five cente worth of them? —Labor evidently wasn’s sore at GoM- PERS lor having tried to elect BRYAN. as the American Federation has just re-elect- ed him its president, with only one dissent. ing voice, —Mr. BRYAN's declination to goona jaguar hans while in Mexico makes it look as if the Tammany tiger bad made him a litle skeptical as to his prowess with the family felis. | ~—CARRIE NATION has gone to Europe. Poor CARRIE! There was only one other thing she could have done to keep herself in the public eye and that wae to have lost her diamonds. ~=It is too bad, but KATHARINE CLEM- ONS GouLDp will simply have to worry along on twenty-five thousand a year; since her husband refuses to worry along with her any longer. —Brother JoHN D. will doubtless resent Mr. CARNEGIE'S becoming a mouth piece for him. ANDY may be ready to have the tariff on iron and steel out off, bat JOHN hasn't said so about oil. ~The record of foot ball fatalities for the year is thirteen to date, with one handred and twenty-nine serionsly injured. Any one of those Central American States can pull off a good sized war with far less cas- ualties, —Why shounldn’t Governor STUART plan his new Trans-State road so that it touohes State College. Such a route would not he devions and it would open a great state highway to the State's one great in- stitation of learning. —Sheriff-elect HURLEY has appointed Mr. HARRY Goss, of Philipsharg, as his ‘plimedtary t ~Alter all it is rather fortunate that Mr. BRYAN was not elected else he wonld have been hlamed with the plague of the mouth and hoof disease that has gotten hold of Pennsylvania and New York cattle. Yon will remember that a certain wise (?) man pamed SHARPLESS had poor BRYAN book- ed to pat all the cows dry. —Your Uncle JosgPH CANNON seems to be willing to roll over, jump through and eat out of everybody's hand just now =o that ke can get back into the Speaker's chair, but your Uncle JosgPH is so much like the devil when he got sick and wanted to be a monk that we fear if he gets back to pre- siding over the House he will act just like the devil again. —Senator CHANDLER, of New Hamp- shire, believes that when we die our souls go off to some distant star and are there reinvested with a new physical body so that in eternity we may ‘‘see and hear and have the sense of taste, smell and touch and perhaps other new and more joyous senses.” We don't koow what Senator CHANDLER hopes for in those ‘‘other new and more joyous senses,”’ hat probably he bas in mind the thought that there won’s be any souls reinvested with the ‘‘big stick” on the star that he is going to, nor any calling one another liar! —The Hon. ANDREW CARNEGIE has come to the conclusion that iron and steel ought to be pat on the free list. In other words, now that the Hon. ANDREW has grown so rich on a protective tariff that he don’t know what to do with his money he thinks it is time to ont oat the protection. It was time, long ago, and everybody knew that tiie United States Steel Co., the greatest Trust we have, could scarce longer be called ‘‘an infant industry,” but wheth- er it will be done or not remains to be seen. We fear that the other fellows in the Trust who haven’s gotten as much as the Hon. ANDREW well make such a holier as will completely drown the effect of his forthcoming article in the Century Maga- zine. —The new five dollar gold coin that is be- ing minted at the Philadelphia mint is the oradest and most unattractive looking piece of money that we have ever seen bearing the stamp of the United States government, It is a replica of the twenty aud ten issued last year, with the exception that it bears the motto “In God We Trust,” and is so imperfectly esamped as to make it look more like the brass button on my lady’s coat than a government coin. It is not milled at all, consequently the relief of the Indian head and the eagle that are the only redeeming features of the larger ooins is lost entirely in an apparently indiscernible jumble of feathers, stars and lettering. It will pass, however, and notwithstanding our disapproval of is, artistically, we will receive it on subscription. , | bis VOL. 58 Let Us Try Our Old System With New Safe-guards, The thousands upon thousands of votes that were lost to distriot and county tiok- eto, at the recent election, by voters mark- ing in the equare at the bead of the elect- oral ticket in place of in the square desig- pating a straight party tickes, bas pretty effectually convinced the people of the ne- cessity of a change in the form of our bal- lot, or at least some simplification of it. Four years ago when the same loss of votes, from the same cause, was noted, it was explained that the method was new and that as voters became acquainted with the ballot they would soon learn to mark it properly and thas at future elections there would be no causs of complaint. Since then we have had four years of ex- perience and the same old trouble and the same old complaints are here to wrestle with. Surely a people who want to do right, who mean to do right, can adopt some sys- tem of voting that will enable the ordinary citizen to express his choice of candidates withoat having to go to a voting school to learn how, or be compelled to rely on some one else for assistance in voting properly. Seventeen years ago we had the old vest pocket system of voting. No one lost his vote then nor did we bave to have aid or assistance to show the many how to cast their ballots. It was a simple system, a system that enabled any one to vote for whom he desired without instruction, ma- nipulation or the oversight of either the onrious or the interested. Since that change after change in the bal- lot has been made, and with each change greater complications have been added, un- til now only the practical politician is ab- solutely certain that he knows just how the right warking should be done. The most intelligent oitizen casts his ballot with doubt as to its being counted. The ordi- nary man who dislikes to ask assistance re- fuses to attend the election. The ‘‘float- er’ finds good excuse for demanding the aid of the ‘‘briber,"” who wants to see that votes as he is paid to do and taken ‘we doabt if a more complicated, int at ptiasd jindubrtbe ik What we shonld have is an inexpensive, simple and secret method of voting. One that will allow any qualified citizen to cast his ballot without aid and in entire secre- oy, and this, a return to the vest-pooket ballot, with proper safe-guards about the voter while depositing his ballot, would bring. A continuation of the eleciion booth, which each voter woald be required to enter, place his ticket in an envelope and deposit itin the ballot box, unseen by any one after entering the election room, would simplily voting amazingly. It would do away with all excuse for assist. ance, because the voter would have the opportunity of preparing his ballot before coming to the election. It would prevent ball-dozing by employ- ers or bosses, hecaase they would be given no opportunity to know what ballot their employee placed in his envelope. It would end the bribery of voters he- cause the briber would have no means of ascertaining if he was getting the ballot deposited that he had paid for. It would end the excnse that corrupt election boards make for throwing out or refusing to count ballots on the ground of imperfeos marking. In fact, it wonid end so many aud so much of the wrongs now justly complained ol in our voting system, that it seems to us that the individual or the law maker who would refase to go back to our former sys- tem, with the safeguards added that we have mentioned, don’t want either a sim- ple and satisfactory method of voting, or a lair and honest election. The Greater of Evils, The information which comes from Hot Springs in regard to the purposes of the President-elect with respect to the organiza- tion of the Sixty-second Congress are con- flioting. It has been alleged that Mr. TAFT will intervene to prevent the re-election of Speaker CANNON on ona band and asserted with equal positiveness that he will not interfere on the other. The latest reports, however, indicate shat the moral influence of the incoming administration will he agaioat the Speaker. Representative Bur. TON, of Ohio, had a prolonged conference with Mr. TAFT the other day and states that ‘the hig man’’ will tolerate no ob- straction to legislation after his inaugura- tion, Of course the inference to he drawn from that is that the new administration will be hostile to the re election of CANNON, The Speaker represents what President ROOSEVELT anathematizes as the “‘re- actionary element’’ of the party. The re- form iegislation which ROOSEVELT has so harmlessly insisted upon during she last two sessions of Congress is inimical to the interests of those who are behind CANNON and all the obstructions that have been put in the way of their passage are the work of CANNON. In a speech delivered during the campaign, and as yet uncontradicted, Mr. CANNON declared that be was acting in the matter at the request of ROOSEVELT, and probably he was. Bat il TAFT wants no obstructions during his administration, he will necessarily defeat or discipline the Speaker. Every American citizen who favors just government and opposes special privileges will hope for the defeat of JosePH G. CAN- NON for the speakership of the Sixty second Congress. He has been the enemy of pro- gress, the shelter of corruption and the champion of corporate greed in the legisla- tion of the country for many years. He has prevented the consideration of just and needed measures for no other reason than that the predatory interests of which be was acd is the servile instrument, opposed such legislation. Bust we doubt the ex- pediency of executive interference in the organization of Congress even for the achievement of so desirable a result. The fundamental law of the land forbids the encroachment upon one department of the government by the other and when the President projects himself into a fight for the speakership of the House he is violat- ing his oath of office and the fundamental law of the country. We bad hoped that when the present victim of brain storm vacated the office of President his successor would have decent respects for the obligations of law and that the administration of the government would be restored to the lines honored by the preo- edents of a century. Batil TAFT pursues the unconstitutional methods of RoosE- VELT, this expectation will be disappointed and great as the evil of the re-election of CANNON would he that wonld be more dangerous. The Sign of A Small Man, It is not that anybody cares particularly what his opinions are, or what his purposes may be, State Treasurer SHEATZ is adding nothing to his reputation as a man or to the digoity of his office by his continuous aud dirty insinuations about the manage- ment of the State Treasury by his pred: eoessor, the Hon. Wn. H. BERRY. Ever since he assumed she duties of that office, ti pa ait hoa y ps insinnations attempt to leave the impres- sions that he alone was entitled to the credit of abolishing methods and reforming systems that bad brought disrepute upon the department. He has gone so far as to claim credit, through the newspaper press, for nearly every reform inaugurated in that office, whether it was in systematizing the manner of keeping the accounts, she col- lections and settlements of corporation taxes, the prompt payment of the school fand or the care taken to know thas bonds, held for the guarantee of State depcsits, are good and sofficient. And in each of his claims for having done his daty the little- ness of the man would crop out in the in- sinaation that the State was having better service under him than had ever been known in the Treasury department. When it is stated that since Mr. SHEATZ has taken charge of that office not a single reform, additional to those inaugurated or enforced by Mr. BERRY, has been made in its methods or management, the little- ness and gall of the man in claiming that all the reforms that have taken place are to be credited to him will be understood and appreciated. No one wants to detract a particle from any good work that he may be doing, but when he is advertising his own astions it would be much more manly in him todo it without attempting to cast re- flectiona upon his predecessor, whose record for carefunlness and efficiency has never been questioned by even his bitterest enemies. ‘We recall two of his numerous instances of glorifying himself and at the same time reflecting upon bis predecessor. Last sum- mer when closing up the business of pay- ing out the money due to the various school distriots of the State, it was loudly berald- ed, as the only time in the history of the Treasury, that such promptness had been shown. It was Mr. BERRY that inaugurat- ed that reform and enforced it during both years of his terms. Mr. SHEATZ in mak- ing these payments promptly was only fol- lowing the example thas had been given by his Democratic predecessor. A lew weeks ago when the wreckage of a Pitts burg bank threatened to lose to the State a hall million dollars of its money, that a Republican hoard of Treasury managers had placed on deposit in is, Mr. SHEATZ barriedly got into print to assure the pub- lic that if any loss was sustained by the State it would be due to Mr. BERRY'S manipulation of the guarantee bonds, al- though these bad heen accepted by Mr. SHEATZ six months previous and held by him all that time as entirely safficient se- curity for the amount at atake. It is little thiogs like these that show the calibre of some people. —A new counterfeit five dollar bill is in circulation. Itisan Indian head silver certifivate and if you notice that the In- dian’s eyes are orossed cross your fingers and don’t take the bill. “STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., The Why eof It with Mr. Curnegte.| NOVEMBER 27, 1908. Mr. CARNEGIE bas evidently grown tired of doling out organs to impecunious churches and libraries to communities that are willing to tax themselves to maintain these evidences of his muchly advertised generosities. He bas doubtless sickened of the labor of distributing other people’s money and concluded that henceforth he will rest frow these labors. For after all, the money he has given to she public was taken from the people and he wakens up at this late day to discover that holding his bage under the hopper of the tariff mills brings more duties aud more trials thao the mere lugging away the loot that runs into them. Through the operations of a protective tariff he has grown rich beyond the dreams of avarice. Its coutivuation is the oon- tinuation and increase of his immense for- tune and now when the question of how to care for,or what to do with, this great wealth confronts him he sensibly awakens to the fact that American manufacturers have no farther need for protection and that a revision of the tariff should be made ss quickly as possible that will reduce is to a revenue basis alone. In his argument for a reduction of duties he states explicitly, that with conditions as they now are in this country our manufacturers can profitably compete in any line with the productions of any country oo the globe, and conse- quently to continue tariff taxation for the purpose of protection is simply taxing the consumers of the coontry to swell the profits of the favored few. Others have seen and known this simple truth for years. Itisa knowledge of this fact that bas given the impetus and strength to the demand for tariff reduction which kas taken such bold upon the entire country. It is the recognition of this trath on the part of thinking Republi- caus thas has split that party into ‘‘stand- patters’’ and ‘‘reactionaries’’ and threatens to continue that split until itis beyond the bope of future barmony. What effect Mr. CARNEGIE’S action and advice may bave upon the law makers of his party woald be difficult to forecast. Bat, why that gentleman, after the many Aciary of the protection that he mow de- olares unnecessary and consequently wrong, has taken the trouble to publicly demand its reduction might be easier to guess. It is not that Mr. CARNEGIE'S con- science troubles him for he gives no intima- tion that even a cent of the people's money that “‘protection’’ has taken from them and given to him will be returned. It is not that be finds fault with the policy of the party that be defends and will continue its protective system, for his contribution of $25 000 to its recent campaign fund is evi. dence of thas, nor is it because of the wrongs and falacies of the principle, for he finds nothing to condemn therein. What then can be the cause of his sud- den and surprising awakening to the need- lessness of protection other than that he is surfeited with the immense wealth it has brought him—weighed down with the loads of money he can neither use nor enjoy, and that he seeks relief from the accumulating troubles that the distribution of his vast and continuously incredsing fortune im- poses. Aud what a commentary is this, his con- dition, upon a governmental policy that has made such a thing possible? Whas an illustration of the wrongs and the robbery of the protective system. Tens of thous- ands of honest laborers in this country who have heen compelled to pay tariff taxes for years upon years are wondering today where their next meal is to come from. Tens of thonsands of others from whom the same iniquitous taxes have been wrung, are being fed at public soup houses or kept in the charity homes that are more numerous and bave multiplied faster than our “‘protected’’ industries. Could a graver lesson on the iniguities of the tariff be furnished ? —— Pennsylvania Day at State College has certainly given a forward impulse to the uplift which is daily making iteelf more manifest about that splendid institu tion, in that it demonstrated ‘hat the whole people of the State are behind it with active interest and gocd wishes be- cause of its recognized value and import. ance to the common people. The presence of so large a namber of the Senators and Members-elect of the General Assembly, and their abounding and uunetinted praise for the institution and its great work, was a most interesting feature of the day. These Legislators were greatly impressed with the equipment of buildings and ap- pliances which they found there, and much more 80 by the personnel of the really great instructing force and officers, and the splendid array of stalwart, mature, manly students and their work in the practicums and on the drill ground. Avnd they were outspoken in their assurance of a more lib- eral polioy than hae obtained heretofore in its financial support which the State as- sumed nearly a half century ago. NO. 47. Carnegie Would Cat Tariff Claims “Infant Industries’ Ne Longer need Pro- tection. Says Steel and Oil Duties Should Be Abolished, and Urges Tariff for Revenue and an Increase In Taxes on Imported Articles Consum- ed by the Rich. From the December Century. Andrew Carnegie, who built up the steel trust and amassed a huge fortune under tive tariff, claims that there is no onger any need of protecting our one-time ‘‘infans industries’ which have now grown to lusty maturity ; that doties on maou- factured articles ought to be greatly reduo- ed, ve duties on steel and oil al- toges abolished and ‘‘daties for reve- pue'’ increased on imported luxuries con sumed by the rich, a a a sap to be a ‘‘dyed-in-the -wool'’ pro- tectionint, Mr. Carnegie makes in his ar- ticle, ‘My Experience with and Views Up- on the Tarif,’ which will appear in the December issue of the Century Magazine, to be published November 25th, ia whioh, alter sketohing the development of Ameri- can protection and relating inside stories of tarifl legislation in Congress, he arrays the facts and arguments which convince him that she day of tariff for protection in America is gone, and shat, in general, such duties shonld be greatly decreased, abolish- ed in many oases, and duties increased on im luxuries. o spite of this radical standpoint Mr. Sovoesie Hinkel he is still = ugh of 2 on where protection y needed ) as he ever was, and that he has not one iota since he has formed a olear and definite view in regard to protec- tion. He further states that President Mo- Kinley was of ‘‘our school of protection- ists,’’ strong for protection where needed, ‘‘bus equally strong in abolishing the un- necessary duties.”’ Pointing ous thas the MoKinley bill, generally considered higb- protective, really reduced duties on steel rails, beams, structural shapes, nails, forg- ings, eto., Mr. Carnegie goes on %0 narrate the part he himself played in making out liste reducing iron and steel dasies in con- neotion with the Wilson and other tariff re- form bills, and shows how two distinguish- ed Democratic leaders, Senator Gorman and Gov. Flower, hel to defeat the ‘revolutionary features’’ of the Wilson bill aud yet obtained a thorough and judi- cious reform, redaciog daties on iron and steel one-third. i Regarding the present status of the steel industry, the master of Skibo castle says, “‘the writer has co-operated in making the several reductions as steel manufacturers became ahle to bear reduction. Today Spawls from this Keystone. ~Machivery is being inatalled for a new bosigry plant at Birdsboro, Berks county. —The work of clearing away the debris of the Williamsport nail mill, destroyed by fire some time ago, has been begun. The work of rebuilding will be rushed as fast as possi- ble. ~Six young men of Hellerton, Northamp- ton county, passed through a toligate on the Steinburg pike without stopping to pay the required six cents toll and the trick cost them $46.66. —James T. Ormsly, of Philadelphia, who is a bartender at a small saloon at Tenih and Mifflin streets, has become heir to $1,500,000 left him by his cousin of the same nsme who died in Alaska recently, —The Bedford Ice and Cold Storage com- pany was organized by Bedford business men last Wednesday evening with = capital stock of $20,000. An application has beea made for a charter from the State. —The State constabulary found a lot of hides, worth $100, stolen from Brown's slaughter house, near Osceols, on November 6th, buried in the woods mear Philipsburg. They hope to catch the guilty parties seon. —Five hundred thousand dollars in gold are being coined every day at present in the United States mint at Philadelphia, to meet the demand which has already set in for the valuable yellow pieces for Christmas pres- ents. —Johun A. Aullenbach, of Reading, treas- urer of the Socialist party in Pennsylvania, on Monday filed a statement at the State de- partment, swearing that the recent cam- paign expenses of the party in Pennsylvania were less thao $50. the United Evangelical church has purchas- ed a grove of fifty acres at West Milton, Un- fon county, for campmeeting purposes. A large tabernacle will be erected and a site laid out for 150 tents. ~The Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron company has completed arrangements for the washing of the culm banks at the Swatara colliery, near Pottsville, abandoned twenty-five years ago. It is estimated that fully 2.000 tone of coal will be thus secured. —The postoffice at Wernersville, Berks county, was robbed by thieves sometime dar. ing Wednesday night of last week, who se cured $400 in cash and stamps. Suspicion rests on three strangers who were seen in the neighborhood the evening previous to the robbery. —Chiel Burgess Charles B. Clayton, of Waynesboro, recently fined himself $5 for failing to clean the snow from his front pave- ment within the allotted twenty-four hours. Fifteen other people, including three minis. ters, were compelled to fork over for failure on the same thing. —Attracted by a dog that had barked at one place for four hours, several men found the dead body of Clemence Biggle, aged 20 years, of Reynoldsville, Jefferson county, be. hind a stump in a woods on Saturday. His gun had evidently been discharged accident- ally, causing his death. —A mammoth saw mill is to be built on they need no protection, unless ; sone hew pesialtics unkoown Seen, ‘Hawk's Run, Clearfield county, to cut the er, hecauee steel is now produced cheap- er here than anywhere else, notwithatand- ing the higher wages paid per man. Nota ton of steel is produced in the world at as small an outlay for labor as in our own country,” and from his experience as a steelmaker, he arrays facts and conditions that explain the paradox of “‘high wages” and ‘‘lower cost for labor.” He is as positive on oil as on steal, and concludes his apparently enthusiastic dis- cussion of the protective and retaliatory oil duty with the statement, ‘The oil produc: ers, like the steel producers, of our coun- try, need vo protection from the products of other lands.” “My Experience with, and Views Upon the Tariff’’ most earnestly champions tariff for revenue, and from Mr. Carnegie’s state- wents and indorsements of this we quote : “In conclusion, tariff for protection, which was the issue fortv years ago, should now give place to a tariff for revenue, and therefore the strict ioaintenance of the present duties upon foreign luxaries, paid by the rich * * *» **In the writer's opinion, the revision of the tariff could today safely and advantag- eously be made a radical one upon the lines suggested, but if Congress, in deference to the timid manufacturer, ‘whom we always bave with ue,’ thinks it prudent not to dis- tarb his dreams unduly, and only halves the present duties upon some articles and abolishes them entirely upon others, al- ways provided it guards zealously the pres- ent daties on laxaries of the rich for reve- noes, the writer will be thankfal and phil- osophical as usual, because one step in the right direction will have been taken, and he knows the final step must come belore long —the sooner the better.”’ Characteristically enough, Mr. Carnegie closes his article with a laurel wreath for the ‘‘white bird of peace’’ which is more or less his exclusive property—‘‘for nothi can keep the republic from speedily dwarf- ing all other nations industriously if she only continues to frown upon the great na- vies and increased armies and continues to tread the paths of peace, foilowing the tru- ly American policy of the fathers.” Where Democratic flecovery Can Begin. From the Newark Evening Star, Democratic reorganization means a defi- nite Democratic policy in national affairs in barmony with approved Democrasio principles. Congress will soon weet, and she Democratic minority, fresh from a great party defeat, is likely to be demoral- ized unless steps shall be taken to reform the party, inspire it with vew resolves and make its representatives at Washington feel that they have, indeed, behind them a great organization of 6,000,000 voters, pre- pared to do battle again and firm in the as- sertion of party dootrine. Unity by the Demooratic minority in Congress at the comin suision is i ov Hal ue par. ty reorgan on. 0 pol at cratic policy should be given recognition by the minority. If there is incoherence in Congress among Democrats, where shall coherence be looked for? If the session is marked by the vagaries and inconsistencies ot Detnutiakio members, hay can be ex- pected of the party generally ? Demoorat- io party recovery should set in at Washing- ton next month. Much can be done by Yue Dp ber) of Congress do re- vive party t promote or- gavization. But something is to Re done by the representative Democrats of the country in anticipation of the wession of Congress. timber on what is known as ‘‘the Forcey Tract.” The job is estimated as being one that will last for eight years and Philipsburg merchants are happy over the prospects of the business which the new industry will create, —The long looked for enlargement of the Pennsylvania railread shops at Renovo is to be begun by the erection of a new boiler shop, which will be constructed of structural steel and brick, the dimensions to be 280 by 80 feet, and will be equipped with hydraulic machinery, electric crane and all modern machinery necessary for a first class boiler shop. —Rev. Dr. J. W. Schwartz, pastor of the Washington charge in Armstrong county, of the Pittsburg general synod, Luth- eran church, will soon be honored by the celebration of his fiftieth anniversary in the ministry, forty-one years of which he served as pastor of the Worthington charge. Dar- ing that period he admitted 993 persons to church membership. —Mrs. Oliver Nace, of near Petersville, Lehigh county, was awakened Saturday night about midnight by a choking sensation and discovered her room filled with smoke and the entire floor below in flames. She quickly aroused the five members of her household and all barely escaped by jumping from the second story windows, arrayed only in their night clothes. —The epidemic of foot and mouth disease continues to spread among the live stock in the eastern part of the State aud now exe perta are to be called in to help fight the plague. These are federal inspectors and they will make an examination of the differ. ent farms in the counties in which the affec- tion has spread. These counties are: Mon. tour, Nortbumberland, Columbia, Union, Snyder and Lehigh. —A big slide of rock occurred suddenly Tharsday afternoon about three o'clock, at the California quarries of the PittsburgLime- stone company, below Tyrone. Thousands of tons of rock, suddenly released by the thaw, crashed down without = seconds warn. ing upon a gang of forty foreign laborers, who almost miraculously escaped a terrible death. Two of the men, however, were caught and slightly injured. —An epidemic of diphtheria at Muncy has caused the local officers of the State board of health to order all the churches closed. Twenty cases of the disease were reported last week, and there were as number of deaths. Acting for the State department the authorities one night last week, stopped a moving picture show in the opera house and ordered the closing of all nickel shows. The schools have also been closed until further notice. —(George F. Kehrig, of Scranton, gives too much religion as the cause for seeking di- worce from his wife to whom he was married seven years ago. He alleges, that so intense is her zeal in church work that she neglect- ed her home duties, and that she would sometimes start out at nine o'clock in the morning and not retarn until midnight; that in the meantime he had to prepare his own meals, and that his endeavors to convince her that a wife's first duty is to her family bad been unsuccessful. —The Central Pennsylvania conference of « a