wa MEEK. 8Y RP. GRAY Tule Slings. —They are having fine Knights in Phil. adelphia this week. —Oue thing nice about a circus is that when it is in town no one thinks of bard times or business depression. —The man who invented a machine with which to cat bie own hair must be a rela- tive of some of Belleloote’s philanthro- pists. —The QUAY statue is still in statu quo. If it were infected with the swallpox or yellow fever most men could not be more afraid of is than they are. —They locked a man up in Washington, a few days ago, because he wanted a mil lion dollars. He was evidently vot a trust lobbyist. The amount he sought was too small. —Earthquakes have heen shaking up some parts of the United States agaiv bus up to this writing Mr. PATTEN hae not been shaken ons of his nice listle corner in wheat. —Since #0 many of the Democrats iu the Senate have given evidence of not kuowing what they are it would sound good tu hear DAVE HILL repeat his old declaration just onoe again. —A westerner has discovered that whis- key can be made non-intoxicating. What a waste of time. No one would buy that secret; for take the jag out of whiskey and thedrinker would prefer buttermilk. —JoB CARNEY, of Spokane, Washing- ton, picked a pocket and got seventy cents and five years in the penitentiary. He might just as well have gotten more mon- ey, but that was probably all his victim bad. —Part of official Washington is throw- ing a fit because the new government of Coba is epending more than its income. The fact that Uncle Sad is getting into the hole at the rate of nearly a million a day ie too small a matter for them to see, of course. —It has been found that a common horse-fly cau stand an electric current that would kill a horse. Why the comparison ol resistance between the horse fly and the horse. Every one knows, who knows any- thing at all about them, that a horse-fly can make a horse fly a good deal more than electricity anyway. —I¢ was a mean, nasty story to stars and we don’t blame our friend RoBErT F. HUNTER for getting mad because a covet ous individual circulated a statement to the effect that he and WILLARD HALL and Toner HuGG are to bave an automobile race from the First National bank building over to the Trust Co. —Free lumber was killed in the Senate on Monday afternoon. That the tariff is being more and more regarded as a local is- sue was proven by the vote of seventeen Democratic Senators who voted with Re. pablicans to save the tariff on is. They represent States in which there are still large lumber interests. —That President TAFT wants to play goll and does not want to go to war is eeen in his request to bave thirty-six mil. lion dollars lopped off the budget for the army maintenance for 1911. That's right, Mr. President, we would all much prefer to see this country using golf sticks than brandishing the big stick. —Conduotor WiLsox E. BARNETT wae awarded $2000 damages by the Blair conn- ty court for having bis leg crushed in a Pennsylvania railroad accident. He bad drawn over $400 from the relief fund of the company. When on the stand he swore he conld neither read nor write and that his nape bad been secured by frand to the relief clause waiving his right to action for damages. This decision may change the relief system of all railroad corporations. —That circuses do not attract as general. ly as they once did is becoming more evi- dent each time a big show comes to town. There was a day when every train coming into Bellefonte on circus day would have been crowded, but such is not the case any more. The crowds are mostly local. This change is probably accounted for hy the fact that circus acts now form part of the programs of big picnics, fairs and vaade- ville shows so that they are not the novel attraction they onee were, to the country people especially. ~The United States Supreme court bas hauded down an opinion to the effect that express compacies may oarry liquor into counties or districts in a State that bas vot- ed for local option. This is a serious blow at practical local option for under the cloak of interstate commerce liquor and beer may be shipped into ‘‘dry”’ districts and being shipped to individuals in quantity is is highly probable that the receiver will use it in quantity, thus really working more harm than would be the case if he had a place to get it in moderation. —Aeronaut LEO STEVENS, who made as. sensions every day for a week at Heola Park, some years ago, has developed into a soientist. He is now busy assisting Prof. Davip B. Topp, of Amherst, in preparing for a flight ten miles high into the heavens from which altitude they think they can successfully get a signal to the people of Mare—if there are any people there. It they should happen to get converse with the Martians we would suggest that they tell them that as soon as inter-planetary transportation facilities are completed RocKERFPELLER and MORGAN will be up to look it over. Sia SOL. os Lane's Estimate of Quay. “Dave” LANE, chairman of the Phila- delphia City Reputlican committee and secretary of the QUAY monument commis- sion shares with former Governor SAMUEL W. PENNYPACKER in that curicus gen- tleman’s estimate of the late Seuvator QuAY'S ability and merit. *‘I believe that measared by his achievements be was greater than Cray or WEBSTER,” Mr, LANE declared, oracalarly, in an interview the other day. ‘‘He was a wonderful con- structive statesmau,’’ continued Mr. LANE. “It was QUAY who turned the WiLsON free trade measure into a protective meas: ure,’ headded. Manifestly be bad in mind the ocoasion in which, with a pile of bound Congressional Records as high as his head, Senator QUAY threatened to talk until the end of the session unless certain conces- sions were given to the predatory ocorpora- tions of which he was the paid lobbyist on the floor of the Senate. That was the ouly occasion on which he attempted to influence or alter legislation. . We dislike to recall the infamous record of MATTHEW STANLEY Quay. The amiable adage, ‘‘say nothing but good of the dead,” is particularly kind to his odor- ous memory and if his fool friends would let him quietly sink into oblivion the pub- lic mighs, in the course of time, forget his iniguities. But one after another of them come forward at irregalar intervals and compel a protest, in the interests of de- cenoy, against the false representation of his record in publio life. There was some excuse for PENNYPACKER. Weak-miuded and vain, be bardly knows the difference between right and wrong and QUAY bad been so good to him that his infatuation was hardly blamable. MoNICHOL knows so little about public morals that it is scarcely worth while to take bim seriously either. But ‘DAVE’ LANE knows as well as any man living that QUAY was a moral monster and that the attempt to canonize him is for the deliberate porpose of justi- tying political crime and official iuiguity. QUAY served in the Penneylvania Legis- lature a couple of terms when he was a young man bat the record reveals no act or word of his that even pretended to conserve the public good. He served as Secretary of she Common- wealth eight years but introduced no sys- tem that improved the methods or reform- ed the practices of that department of the State government. While in that office he was ex-officio commissioner of the sinking fund and that fand was short $100,000 when he quis. He served as State Treasurer one year and within that time was charged with looting the Treasury of a vast sum. He served as Senator in Congress for twelve years aod in all that time never in- troduced an important measure of legisla. tion or made a speech that contribnted in the least measure to the honor of the Com- monwealth or the welfare of the people of the State or country. Constructive states. manship, as we understand it, acheives something more than this. It bailds op something more useful than a corrupt polit- ical machine. Senator QUAY was the agent of the Standard Oil company aud the lobbyist of other predatory corporations in Harrisburg and Washington for many years and sacri- ficed the interests of the people ruthlessly in order to serve the purposes of the oor- porations which paid him for sinister serv- ices. He served as chairman of the Republican national committee during one presidential campaign aud taught the practical politi- ciaus how to *‘fry the fat’’ out of the tariff pensioners and use the proceeds of the crim- inal operation in debanching the ballot. But he so completely outraged the moral sense of his party that be was repudiated immediately after the election by the Presi- dent chosen as the resalt of his campaign mavagement and though a candidate for re- election he was defeated by an overwhelm- ing majority. He was also chairman of the Republican State committee for a brief period. He bought the election with mon- ey supplied by the Standard Oil company for a selfish and sinister purpose. Bat the surprising thing in the absurd interview of Mr. LANE is bis reference to the WiILsoN bill of 1894. It has been the custom of Republicans to attribute the panic of 1893 to thas ‘‘free trade’’ act and now Mr. LANE tells us that it was changed into a protective measure by Senator Quay. As a matter of fact QUAY bad no more to do with that piece of legislation than Mr. LANE bad with oreating the Allegheny mountains. Senator GORMAN, of Mary- land, perpetrated that crime against the people though he may have used QUAY as a convenient and willing instrument of the corporations to threaten a dead-loock in the event that certain concessions were not made. Bat even in that instance and upon that occasion he was not an imposing figure, He simply personated the highwayman who mes the traveler with ‘‘your money or your lite,”” and made bimsell a laughing stock for the entire country. Such a man de- | serves no monument unless from a people who have descended into such depthe of depravity that they desire to canonize crime and vice. Unjustifiable Tariff Taxation. Senator CULBERTSON, of Texas, expressed the true principles, policies and traditions of the Democratic party, the other day when be declared tbat ‘‘noder whatever grant of federal power it is sought to be justified, a tariff which compels the great hody of the consumers of the conntry to pay more tribute to those from whom they purchase, is a gross and palpable prostitution of leg- islative power.” JEFFERSON expressed the same principle when he asserted that *‘after making provision for an economical and efficient administration of the govern ment, it should not take from the mouth of labor the bread it bas earned.” The DINGLEY bill bas, according to au estimate of Mr. VAN CLEAVE, recently president of the National Association of Manufacturers, perpetrated this wiong to the extentola million dollars every day. Senator CULBERTSON'S speech was a great effort. He revealed most clearly the falsity of the pretense that the ALDRICH bill now pending in the Senate and practically certain to be jammed through before long isnot a revision downward or in any respect tariff reform. ‘‘The average existing ad valorem rate on all articles,’ he said, ‘‘is 44.88 per cent. In 1906 tariff taxes actoally paid on 91 groups of articles were 100 per cent. or over. It has been estimated by leading Republicans and protectionists,’’ he continued, ‘‘that ander the DINGLEY act the people pay to the pro- tected interests annnally a mere tribute or subsidy of $500,000,000. This is practical. ly divided among she trnsts, she Sogar trust receiving $20,000,000, the Oil trust $20,000,000 and the Steel trast $0,000,000 yearly. Notwithstanding the exorbitant rate now imposed the pending bill carries a higher one, an average rate of 46.45 per cent. over the DINGLEY rate. Nogood citizen objects to the payment of a just share of the expenses of she gov- ernment and to the extent that taxes are necessary for economical and efficient administration they should be cheerfully paid. Bat the DiNGLEY bill, according to the estimate of Mr. VAN CLEAVE, takes [rom the earnings of labor a million dollars a day which doesn't go as revenue into the na- tional treasury at all but is paid into the treasuries of the trusts as unearned boun- ties, and according to the Republican whom Senator CULBERTSON quotes, even a larger tribute. This is robbery of the people to enrich the trusts and itis on- questionably the gravest orime that bas ever been perpetrated in the name of gov- ernment. It can be justified in no possible way. Taft for Paternalism. That President TAFT means to pursue the ROOSEVELT policy of paternalism was revealed in his reply to a committee of the United States civil service retirement asso- ciation, the other day. The objeot of the association is to devise means to take care of superannuated employees of the govern- ment. President TAFT assured the mem- bers of the committee of his cordial co. operation in their work. “‘Iam strongly in favor of the merit system of appointment in all government positions,’’ he declared, aud added : ‘‘A necessary concomitant of that system, however—a logical accom- paviment—is a provision for those who have become too old to render proper eere- ioe to the government.” No labor in this country is more gener- ously rewarded than that of the employees of the government at Washington. Clerks in the departments get from $1500 to $3000 a year and perform routine duties which occupy their time from six to eight hours a day. Skilled laborers receive less than this amount for much harder and more difficult work and school teachers, men and women employed in stores, clerks of law- vers, designers and others would be elated at the offer of such compensation as the men and women in the public service receive regalarly. Bat a proposition to pension mechanics, school teachers, railroad clerks or skilled or common laborers of any kind would be condemed as absurd. If employees of the government are un- able to take care of themselves in their old age it is their own fault. They attempt to form a sort of official class or aristocracy which involves them in expenses that are neither necessary nor desirable in the pub- lio life of the country and waste their wages in vanities of one kind or another. Of coarse that is their own affair for having earned their wages they have a right to spend it as they like. But the fact that they do spend is creates no valid olaim up- on the bounty of the public and the pen- sioning of them will simply take away the self-relinnce and the frugality whioh ie among the chief merits of American citizen- ship. ~The High school commencement this week marked the olosing of the Bellefonte publio schools and the hundreds of pupils will now have a three month’s holiday. it Can't Sacceed. | There is nothing in which honesty or fair dealing is more necessary to success | than in basiness enterprises. No matter of what nature they may he ‘the same law governs. The public muss have confidence that is is to be treated fairly, whether the enterprise be local or general iu its obar- acter, permanent or transient in its nature. Reputation follows as close as a shadow so that a large business established here today cannot escape the record is has made be- couse it is somewhere else tomorrow. The wails, the telephones, the telegraph and the press have made it practically impossible for the traveling rascal to continue loog in business without beivg fonud ont. CoLE Bros. circus was in Bellefonte on Wednesday and it was a five show of its class ; quite worth the time spent in wit nesting is. While she circus was fine and should win ou its legitimate attractions we certainly can’t see bow it can afford she stigma of baving a gang of short charge artists operat- ing under the big canvas. One of the re. served seas sellers successfully worked the “big bill” frame up on several unsuspeot- ing persons. He asked his dupe whether he could give him big bills for smaller ones of which he professed to have too many. Being met with an offer to exchange he worked the game both ways: Either by not giving the equivalent in small bills or by calling the dupe back alter the exchange was wade and sayiog : ‘‘Here I wanted a larger bill than you gave me so give me back my small ones.” When the dupe banded back the change he bad received the crook gave him a less bill than the one originally exchanged. Of course the suo. cess of the play depended on whether the dape examined bis money carefully, bas in the case we have in mind he did not and received a one dollar bill for a five he had given up. Oue of the ticket sellers at the side show tried to short change your uncle DUDLEY and when he found himself detected was very prompt and affable io making good. In the side show they were running two ‘“‘strong’’ games ; the spindle and ‘‘ten pins’ one of the worst known to the craft, and the Lord only kuowshow many more they would bave framed up bad enough suckers been found. CoLk BRros., have a good show and they might make a lot of money this way for a season or 80 bus they will never enjoy a good reputation as cirous men or work up to the class of Riugling Bros., as long as they wink at the operations of the gang of ‘‘strong’’ game men that are working under the canvas that bears their name. No Occasion for Alarm. The opponents of the iniquitous ALD- RICH tariff bill, especially those of Repub- lican antecedents, are beginning to reveal signs of weakness. Under she direction of ALDRICH the tariff beneficiaries thronghont the country are sending out complaints of delay and manafacturing interests are spreading the report that the return of industrial prosperity is retardedjfon ac: count of delay in passing that bill. If com- meroial activity does not return, they free- ly say, it is because of the uncertainty of the nitimate action of Congress on the tariff, aud some of the Seuators who bave been endeavoring to get a just revision of the tariff are showing signs of being atraid to meet this accusation. It has some effect on the very oredu- lous. But that is an atterly absurd promise. The passage of the ALDRICH bill will not bave a particle of healthful influence upon the industrial and commercial interests of the country. The pavic of 1907 was at- tributable in the main to the exhausted condition of she industrial life of the coun- try. The wage earners had been robbed so persistently and for so long a time that they were literally exhausted and upon the first sign of a currency famine they col- lapsed. So far from the ALDRICH bill remedying this evil it will aggravate it. Instead of taking a million dollars a day out of the pockets of the earners it will in- orease the robbery a considerable percent- age. No opponent of that iniquity need be afraid to mees the people. The evidence that the delay in the pas- sage of the ALDRICH bill has no influence on the industrial life of the country is ap- parent on every side. Is was announced in the metropolitan papers the other day that the industrial establishments of New Eog- land are being overwhelmed with orders. On the same day a dispatch dated Pitts. burg, in the same papers, declared that all signs of industrial paralysis had disappear- ed from that centre. Information from the west indicates an industrial revival there and the south is booming according to the press dispatobes. This important change for the better is not on account of passage of the AvprrcH bill. It is becanse there are signs that the next Congress will give the country real tariff revision. ~—Wheat has passed the $1.35 mark and floar is sailing skyward, as well. Asa re- sult of it all dough is *‘dough,’ indeed. L UNION : — ——— a—— BELLEFONTE, PA., MAY 28, 1909. _ NO ee The Democratic Platform. From the Richmond Times-Dispatch, Of 172 Democrats in the house, 102 have spoken or vosed for high protection in the interests of some small class in their home districts. Soch action being manifestly out of tune with the epirit of their party doctrines and party platforms, their ad- versaries have prodded them into attempts to explain it. Their defenses have taken various lines, the most common of which may be ~et down thas : 1. That this will be a protection ocoun- try for the nexs few years, and thas Demo- crats should bave their fair sbare of the swag. 2. That the particular tax which they favor, unlike similar taxes emanating from Republicans, will lay no burden upon the consumer. 3. That she particular tax which they favor,nnlike similar taxes which they have anathewatized as ‘‘robber protection,’ is purely a revenue tax. 4. That, though their last gd plat- form seemed to declare specifically against the particular tax whioh they favor, it really did oot mean that, but something else. The struggle of Demootatio representa. tives agaiust the charge of apostasy had bitberto rested on propositions about like these. But the Senate debate on Wed- nesday carried she lines much farther for. ward. The Payne bill bad ont the Dingley rate on lumber from $2 to $1 & thousand feet, keeping certain grades on the datiable list at all only tbrough the insistence of Demoorats from lumber districts: Senator Simmons, of North Carolina, a member of the committee which reported the platform resolutions as the last Democratic conven- tion, demands shat the tariff on lumber be pat back to $2. The debate thus precipi- tated elicited two brand new hypotheses from Democratic Senators : 5. That a platform prepared ‘‘by a few western men’’ has no right to single out a certain tax and expect to bind Democrats to oppose it. 6. That platforms are written and brought in at night, when everybody i+ Sired, and nobody cares anything about them. This last shonght emanated from Senator Bacon, of Georgia. It seems to leave down all the bars, . in the Same Boat. From the Harrisburg Star—Independent, A dispatch from Washington says that a contemplated increase of $7,000,000 in the Cuban budget, with a total appropriation of $33,000,000, *‘oreates an unfavorable im- ession in Washington, where few i 0 - De official oircles is that there bas spawls from the Keystone. —S8ixtcen thousand pickere! were received in Huntingdon the other day and placed in several streams of the county. —Daniel Ohlinger, Berks county's veteran woodchopper, since New Year has cut 1,210 cords of wood, made 1,780 fence posts and 2,270 rails. He is 63 years old. —The Cambria county jail at Ebeusburg now has the highest number of prisoners in its history, 198 persons being confined there- in. A contract for the enlargement of the Jail, which is greatly overcrowded. will be let in June. ~The H. C. Frick company has fired up 1,000 more coke ovens in Connelsville region, having but very few of its 20,000 unlighted. The steel trust is out after coke and there is more business in sight than for eighteen months past. —Forest fires are doing considerable dam. nage in the northern part of Cambria county. Despite recent rains the underbrush in the wooded tracts is dry and inflammable and the fire wardens are having great difficulty keep- ing the fires under control. —The board of trustees of Blairsville col- lege for women has extended a call to Dr. Magnus P. Ihiseng, principal of Penn Hall, Wilson college, Chambersburg, Pa., to be- come the president of that institution and the call has been accepted and he will enter upon his duties July 1. ~The Clearfield Water company has plan~- ned to spend thousands of dollars in the con~ struction of two reservoirs. The larger one will be built within 80C feet of the dam on Moose Creek and have a capacity of 16,000, 000 gallons. The other reservoir will have a capacity of 2,000,000 gallons, ~—Boarding himself James J. Stein has for twenty-five years been the sole occupant of a twelve room house, near Seisholtsville, which he erected in the hope of it being a favorite spot for summer boarders, because of its clcse proximity to a fine spring of water which he discovered in the woods. —Milton Meyers, of Lewistown, who was arrested a month ago on the charge of being implicated in the murder of auaged store keeper in Somerset county, aad was held in the Somerset county jail since the arrest, has been released, the grand jury having failed to find a true bill against the young man. —Drowned by the noise of a passing freight train an explosion of nitro glycerine wrecked thesafe inthe Coal Valley post. office near McKeesport and was not heard. The robbers got away with stamps valved at $500, but in their haste overlooked $72 in cash which they had laid on top of the safe. —Edward Edwards, of Jeannette, who went to visit his son in Virginia early in March, left that state apparently for his home and has never been heard of since. Mrs. Edwards is mystified and his friends regard Mr. Edwards’ disappearance as mys- terious. Edwards was at one time postmas- ter of Jeannette. —Business is apparently picking up im Lancaster, all the rolling mills and the pipe mill of the Susquehanna Iron company have ing resumed operations and some of them are running on double turn. Fires have also been lighted in the mill of the Jansen Steel decided tendency toward extravagance the anthorization of expenditures of public money.” Because of the treaty between the two countries, ‘‘the Washington Ad- ministration is watching the developments in the island with much concern.” This concern of official Washington is very refreshing, to speak mildly. The Ca- ban government could bardly do better than imitate the government of the United States in everything. In this country there was no concern expressed by the Ad. ministration with regard to reckless appro- priation: by the Congress. Or, to give the exact trath, is was slapped on the wrist and told thas it shonidn’t spend so much money unless it wanted to. In spite of re- peated warnings that the revenues were less than the expenditures, and that the difference was growing greater daily, the Congress appropriated $1,044,401,857.12 at its session last winter. This was an in- crease of $36,004,313.56 as compared with the appropriations by the the first session of that Congress. It would seem that the Washington gov- ernment should have heen more concerned with domestic affairs than with those of Cuba, which thus far has been able to take care of itself and expeots to obtain all need- ed revenues withous increasing taxation. The deficit in the United States treasury has been increasing. Last year it was about sixty millions of dollars. This year it will be a hundred millions. In spite of warnings the Congress deliberately went abead and appropriated more money than ever hefore, in a mad riot of prodigality. It is not proposed b> the Congress to im. prove conditions by reducing appropria- tions, but to increase taxation by the en- aotment of a new tariff law. Shouldn’t the Washington government be concerned abaat Se United States rather than about False Economy. From the Pittsburg Post. Praise unhounded has been given to President Taft because of his announced intention to enjoin the strictest economy upon the executive departments of the Government. His pronouncement that federal outlaye must be pruned to fit the annual income bps been taken a* a precur- sor of better things in governmental poli- cies. Many persons believe the fever of wanton extravagaoce bas run its course, and that all branches of the Government will now work in harmony to repair the damage by the recklessness of the preceding administration. However may be, there is nothing lly evcouragiag in the naval pro. gram for 1911, lately outlined by Secretary eyer. True, it does propose a reduction of itares of abont $10,000,000. But in what fashion? Is there to be a lopping off of the chief expense of this depariment —the aonual construction of new war ves- sels? Snch a thing never entered the astute brain of the secretary. We must keep u with the international Dreadnaught-build- ing proseasion. We must have at least two new engines of destruction every year. The armor: trust muet be taken care of. But business must come to a standstill in the enlargement and improvement of the navy yards. I doesn’t matter thas these are inadequate to take care of the war ves- sels now afloat. The polioy is short-sight- ed. Cut off the building of one or both Dreadnanghts at $10,000,000 each. That is the most sensible way to economize in this department. Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. i‘fand Iron company and employees have been imported from Middletown and other places. —A circular letter has been received by the county commissioners from Auditor General Young's department stating that the $40,000 appropriation to cover deficiciencies in the noxious animai bounty act will be exhausted by claims already filed. Notice is given that no appropriation or bounties will be available for thet wo fiscal years beginning June 1. Tho act, which was passed in 1907 cost the state $50,000 in addition to the de- ficiciencies. — Attorney James B. O'Connor, of Johns town, on Tuesday flied the papers in two darange suits at Ebensburg. One is for §25,~ 000 damages against the Pennsylvania, Beech Creek and Eastern Coal and Coke company on behalf of 8 boy maimed at the defendant's Marstellar plant, in Cambria county. The other is an action for $10,000 damages against the Johnstown Passenger Railway company, Joseph Smith and wife being the plaintifls. — Business seems to be picking up in some parts of Cambria county. To morrow the Clearfield Coal aud Coke company will fire up 100 new coke ovens which have been con. structed recently. The big demand for the fuel by the iron and steel industry will enable the company to dispose of iis ouipit. The new ovens are equipped with the im. proved washer and crusher and the company expects to turn out coke equal toany manu- factured in the United States. —After making all preparations to retire to her room at the residence of Dr. 0. J. Stricker, at Portage, where she was employed as a domestic, Miss Lizzie Reiland, 21 years old, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Reiland, of Spring Hill, near Portage, committed suicide at 9 o'clock Sunday evening by firing a bullet from a 32 calibre revolver into her right temple. No plausable reason is given for the deed, but it is believed that an unhappy love affair led to the tragedy. —After remaining out all night the jury in the Schrecongost murder case at Clearfield at 9 o'clock Satarday morning brought in a verdict of “murder in the second degree.” Everyone who knew the details of the trage- dy expected that Schrecongost would be found guilty and many expected a first de~ gree verdict, The prisoner gave no sign when he heard the verdict and is calmly awaiting sentence. The crime for which the man was tried was the killing of his wife on the street of DuBois on the 220d of last December. —With seven gold watches, two silver watches, six scarf pine, a gold bracelet, a new fountain pen, a pair of new plyers and a Pl new pocketbook, in their possession, Albert R. Beale, of . Dunbar, and a friend, who ree fused to give his name, were arrested in Al- toons Mouday evening, and locked up at the police station, while Altoona and Pittsburg police are working on the case, Beale and his companion are about 24 years of age and when taken into custody they refused to talk. On Beale was found a number of lets ters which gave the police some valuable in- formation and the Pittsburg police have been notified to in whether 4 Jewsisy store in that vicinity has been The men were caught getting offan eastbound freight train,