r= — The two Bradford couples who danced ten hours without stopping soucht a pew field in which to acquire fame for foolish- ness, —A New York scientist says flies don’ bite. A scientist, ia he? We have an Irish friend who would call hima d liar. ~J. PIERPOINT MORGAN has eailed for bome. Everybody will bave to get down to work when the owner of everything gets back on the job. —Oar baseball team is getting some olass to it now, but it is really too had that it had to be taken out of amateur ranks in order to secnre it. —The government reports eay the corn orop is to be the greatest ever and up to the present moment, we believe, it has not been sworn on President TAFT. ~—That was a mo welcome rain Wednes. day afternoon. Don’t complain because there was nos more of it. The Being that gends the rains knows best when and how much we should have. —Aotion on the disposition of the Quay statue has heen deferred again. Like Bax- QUO's ghost it is always appearing before the Board of Public Grounds and Baild- ious and has them ecared to a frazzle. ~There is no question as to whether we need a new school building. The question to he decided on Aogust 17th is as to whether the directors shoold not bave lcck- ed the stable before the horse was stolen. —Some of the Metropolitan papers are fussiog just now because a London woman has paid fire hoodred and twenty-five dol- lars for a cat. Why so, plenty of men have considered them cheap at double the price. ~The Daily News has been suspended. It wasn’t mach of a paper, but it is very much missed all the eame and now thas it has gone to the shades of journalistio rest those who condemned it most sing its praises londest. —Mre. K. CRAWFORD BuzzZARD, of Kit- tanning, climbed to the top of a tree in or- der to escape the service of a divorce sub- poena which sheriff FRICK bad for ber. What a stunt for a woman, but then being a buzzard she bpaturally took to the tree tops. . ~The WRIGHT brothers and their aero plane are getting into the white elephant olass at Ft. Me er. So many things bap- pen to preclude the flights of the m-chine that the government officials have become disgusted and the spectators bave dwindled to about one a day. —As Dr. ELLIOTT says: ‘Matrimony is the best occupation for woman.”” Bas the Doctor is a theorist and as so many women prefer the cash register, the typewriter, the telephone board, eto., to the wash tub and the cook stove we are constrained to be- lieve them the more practical. — During the mouth of June the Sena. tors of the United States consumed nine- teen thousand two hundred lemons in their drinks while on duty. If like begets like this will probably account for the big lem- on they are to band Uncle SAM in a few days in the form of a tariff bill. —Bishop WiLLray M. BELL may well talk of a revolution as a possible means of getting a division of the wealth that he says ‘‘is centered in a few individuals,” but should his incendiary remarks be tak- en seriously by the masses you can bet your lile the Bishop would be in some com- fortable place eating obicken and expeos- ing all the women in the church to wait upon him while the other fellows would be doing the fighting. —More power to Rev. B. T. CALLEN, of Pottstown ! He spoke the truth when he said ‘‘there is a vast difference in the prom- ses made by men belore election and what they do afterward.” He was sermonizing on the broken promises of the party in power on the tariff bill. While the minis. ter said exactly what he thought to bejtrue be will probably be invited to leave his present charge within the year, because he happens to be a Methodist. ~The capitol “‘trimmers’’ are one step pearer the prison doors” On Wednesday the Superior court sustained their convic- tion hy refusing to grant the appeal for a new trial. SANDERSON and MATHUES have both died since their conviction and only two of the convicted men remain to face the sentence of two years that was im- posed by the Dauphin countyjeourt. They are ex-Auditor General WILLIAM P. SxY- DER and JAMES H. SHOEMAKER, ex-su- perintendent of grounds and buildings. They have one more chance in an appeal to the Supreme court. ~—CHARLES E. DORWORTH presented a new Bellefonte Republican yesterday morn- ing. The first edition under the new man- agement promises well. Of course it will take time to effect the changes he hopes to make bat if the first number is an indica- tion of what future ones may be expected to be it will not be long until the old Re- publican organ will be looking and speak- ing again with a character and force t!at will give it rank with the good weekly pa- pers of the State. It has the editorial abil. ity now, so that all it needs isa more effi. cient equipment and the proper energy. We believe Mr. DORWORTH will give it both and we welcome the clean, friendly competition it brings into the field of Cen. tre county journalism. The purpose of the Republican party to perpetuate the iniquisies of the tariff are quite as olearly revealed in the personnel of the oonfersnce committee as in the schedules of the ALDRICH bill. The Sen- ate members of the committee, so far as the majority party is concerned, are com- posed entirely of ‘‘stand-pasters,’”’ while the House representatives are of preoisely the same sors. Under the circumstances the order made by Senator ALDRICH at the first session of the committee for the Demo- orats to withdraw from the conference was entirely logical. It is the first sime in the history of Congress that sooh a thing has occurred, but is ie the fires time in the hie- tory of the government that legislation of the sors has been cast exclusively on par- tisan lines. In the selection of the House members of the committee the greatest ontrage was perpetrated. In the Senate the Republican members of the finance committee were pamed in the order of their service. Sena- tor ALDRICH has that body so completely under his control that it wasn’t necessary to violate the proprieties in that respeot. Bat in the House the older members of the committee on Ways and Means were com- pelled to give way to newer men on the body for the reason that the older mem. bers could not be cajoled or soersed into acquiescence in the machine plans. Repre- sentative MoCALL, of Massachusetts, was pamed, it is true, notwithstanding his pre- deliotion toward tariff reform, bus with ForDNEY, of Michigan, DarzeLy, of Pennsylvania, and CALDERHEAD, of Kan- sas, besides Chairman PAYNE, as his col- leagues, it didn't matter much what Mo- CALL wanted. The conference hegan by excluding the Democratic members of the body from ite sessions. The purpose of that extraordinary action is obvicus. Sesator ALDRICH pro- poses that the dirty linen of the Republi- oans shall be washed in privacy and that any protests against the tariff iniquities which may be made by Republicans shall be held in seoreoy at least. When any dil- ferences which they may have bave been threshed ont is secrecy and any suggestions in thie interest of the people bave been brash. ed aside under star-chamber conditions, the Democratic members of the committee will be permitted to register their formal pro. test against the atrocity, but that is as far at they will be permitted to go. ALDRICH doesn’s buns with a brass band or give his opponents ivside information oconeerning his plans. Salus for Senator. Toe indications clearly point to she se- lection of Representative SAMUEL W. Sa. LUS as the successor of the late ISRAEL W, DURHAM in the State Senate. SALUS was the putative author of the ‘‘press muzzler” enacted during the session of 1903. Of course he didun’s write the bill, or even con ceive the idea expressed in it. The late Senator QUAY was the real author of that legislative atrocity and, we may add, ab- surdity. But SALUS was the only man in the House of Representatives, sufficiently servile and wantiog in self-respect, to aot as foster-father for the bill and the pelitio- al pirates have felt since that they are un- der some obligations to him. We refer to this circumstance, at this time, not for the purpose of pointing mor- ale or adorning tales. Itsimply indicates the utter depravity of the Republican ma. chine. In the whole history of the world there has never been 3 time when even the bardest criminals and toughest malefactors didn’t reveal a sense of shame. Barglars conceal their criminal impulses as much as possible and even pirates make pretense of decency when they can. Bat in the selec. tion of SAMUEL W. SALUS for the honor of a seat in the Pennsylvania State Senate, the Republican machine simply makes public proolamation that it is withont shame, destitute of self respect and proud of its iniquity. The Legislatures of 1903 and 1905 were 80 openly abandoned to vice that a polit. ical revolation ensued after the adjourn. ment of the last of them. In all the im- moralities of those sessions SAMUEL W, SALUS was conspicuous. He was conspio- nouns in nothing eise, however. He initi- ated no meritorious legislation. He pro- moted no juss public service. He was sim- ply the servile instrument of a piratical crew to loot the State and debaunoch the public. The proposition to make him a State Senator is an outrage upon the con- science of the Commonwealth and a crime against the morals of the people. Such things ought to be impossible and would be if the public mind were properly guid. ed. ———A meeting of the execative com. mittee of the Centre—Clinton counties Business Men’s Picnio association will be held at the Clinton Country Club house at Mill Hall, at four o'clock this (Friday) alternoon, for the purpose of making pre. liminary arrapgements for the annual basi. ness men's pionio at Hecla park this year. STATE RIGHTS AN _ BELLEFONTE, PA. JULY 16, 1909. Promoting a Fiction. The preposterous fiction that the problem of an income tax may be solved by an amendment to the federal constitution bas been encouraged by the sanction of Con- gress. That is to say she House of Repre- sentatives, on Monday, concurred in the resolution of she Senate to submit an amendment to the constitution of the Uni- ted States, for the ratification of the States, authorizing Congress to enact an income tax law. The resolution which bad passed the Senate unanimously, was agreed to in the House by a practically unanimous vote, only fourteen members having declared in the negative. It will be necessary to get the votes of three fourths of all the State Legislatnires to make the resolution effeot- ive and the chances are a hundred to one that that will never be achieved. The resolution in question was a trans- parent enbterfuge in the beginning. Dar. ing the recent presidential campaign Presi- dent TAPT himsell declared both in his speech of acceptance and on the stump, that no chauge in the fundamental law was neo- essary to creates valid and effective income tax law. The Supreme court bad Swice passed on the question and taken opposite sides and the adverse decision bad been ob- tained by ‘‘electioneering’’ the court and inducing justice SHIRAS, of Pennsylvania, to change his opinion. Speaking as a law- yer and juries, therefore, Mr. TAFT bad no trouble in reaching the conclusion that Congress had a right to enact such legisla tion. But subsequently, viewing the sub- jeot from the standpoint of an instrument of the trusts, he adopted the opposite at- titnde. But it may be set down as a certainty that the resolution will no¥ be ratified by three-fourths of the Stati, as required by the constitution. The predatory interests are opposed to an income tax for the reason that it would in some measure, at least, equalize the burdens of government be- tween the rich and the poor. Those inter- ests control enough Legislatures to prevent the ratification of the amendment. Take that of Pennsylvania, for example. It is wishin the lines of conservatism to say that four-fifths of the people of this State are in favor of an income tax. But Senator PEN- ROSE and the corporations he represents would promptly and inevitably defeat the ratification of a constitutional amendment anthorizing such legislation and there are sufficient other States,similarly sontrolled, to decide the question. Trouble in Philadelphia. The evidences of fraud in the Repaubli- oan primaries in Philadelphia continue to distarb the minds of the Republican man- agers, not only of that city, but of the State. It is now realized thas the effort to suppress the facts was a grave mistake bus it is too late to remedy the error. That Mr. GIBBONEY was defrauded of a vast number of votes is freely admitted and that he was cheated out of the Republican nomination, is widely believed. Bat the District Attorney who was the beneficiary of the oriminal operations, doesn’t dare of- fer a public remonstrance. If he did so the machine would defeat him. The gang will tolerate no concessions to decency. The revival of the proposition to lease the water works of Philadelphia is another source of trouble and anxiety to the ma- chine managers. That sach a thing is con- templated can’t be denied or even disguis- ed. It was among the schemes which were defeated by the political revolution of 1805 that resulted in the election of WinLray H. BERRY to the office of State Treasurer. But it wasn’t intended for dis- cussion at this time. In fact Senator Mo- NicHOL declared, the other day, that it was brought into public notice at this time by some enemy of the Republican party. No friend of the srzanization, he protests, would talk about such things on the eve of an important election. Possibly that is true but it is equally certain that it is a part of the present plans of the machine of which he is the nominal bead. The profligacy of the municipal government has made i$ necessary to adopt some extraordinary means of increasing the revenues and leasing the water works is one of the alternatives, the others being an inorease of the tax rate or the borrowing of more money, which is practically impossi- ble. The plans of the machine can be de- feated by the defeat of the Republican par- ty as they were in 1905, and in no other way and the voters of Philadelphia bave the matter in their own hands. ~The date for the dedication of the monument in the national cemetery as Cold Harbor, to all Pennsylvania soldiers who fought in the battle of Cold Harbor June 1st to 3rd, 1863, has been changed from September 15th to Ootober 20th. The State will provide free transportation for all Pennsylvania veterans. Full information can be obtained by writing to Josiah His. song, Point, Bedford county, Pa. ——Philipsburg autoists organized a motor club on Tuesday evening. D FEDERAL UNION. Creating a False Hope. There could hardly be anything more sbsurd than predicting that President k might veto the tariff bill for the rea- that it revises the tariff apward instead downward, as she Repablican platform the President, personally, promised. 0 aod industries of the country re- quire a considerable decrease in the tariff ethedules and it is equally probable that when he gave thas pledge to the people, he meant to fulfill is. Bus TAFT comes nearer beinga ‘‘patty man’ than any figure which bas been conspicuous in the public life of this country from the begin- ping of the goveroment. He has no more backbone than a jellyfish. It Tarr had bad either courage or con- #oience he would never bave been chosen RoOSEVELT for the succession and io ihe absence of such endorsement he would never have been thought of for the office any one, with the probable exception of meell. RoOSEVELT'S first choice for the smocession was .Enigv Root, then Secretary of State and now Senator for New York. Bus Roor refused to endorse some of bis official caprices and be then surned $0 TAFT who was willing to swear that the moon was made of green cheese if ROOSE- VELT would asserts the proposition. This mental servility involved the violation of ie oath of office but that made no dil- prence to TAFT. He is as tractable in morals as he ie in politics. President TAFT will sign any tariff bill or any otber piece of legislation which has tbe endorsement of the Republican Congres. sional machine. He may not believe in the policies or purposes expressed in some of the measures which will come to him for approval, bat that will make no difference. Because of that fact he was selected by ROOSEVELT to succeed him io the office and bad as RooSEVELT was TAFT is worse for this reason. ROOSEVELT bad the courage to assert himsel! under oertain conditions, even though his judgment was faulty. TAFT is simply a servant of the machine. An Incomsistent Statement. + An expert employed by Senator ALD- RICH to fool the pablio by juggling figures with respect to the tariff, asserts, and the Senator supports the assertion that the rates of the WiLsoN tariff bill were little, if any, lower than those of the DINGLEY law, and that the schedules of the ALD- RICH bill are two per cent. lower than those of the DINGLEY law. Io other words the obvious purpose of the Senator is shown that the platform pledge of the Republican party to revise the tariff downward, not only has been fulfilled, but that a lower level than that provided for in the WrLsoN bill has been reached. Of course there is no foundation in fact for such a statement. The schedules of the ALDRICH bill are vastly higher than those of the DINGLEY law and the sobedules of the DINGLEY law are very much higher than those of the WiLsox bill. It ie true that apon a few of the luxuries of life and apon some unimportant and little used artioles of commerce the WILSON bill levied high rates of duties. Like all other legis- lation of that sort it was the fruit of com- promise. Bat upon raw materials it levied no taxes and upon the necessaries of life as little as possible, consistent with revenue requirements. But suppose for a moment the statement is true. How then is Sevator ALDRICH to reconcile his present action with his pre- vious statements that the WirLsox tariff bill was a free trade measure which par- alyzed the industrial life of the country and precipitated the panic of 1903. Cer: tainly those Republican patriots do not de: sire to involve the country in ruin. Yet it low tariff schedules work that result and the ALDRICH rates are lower than those of the Wirsox bill, nothing else can be hoped for after the passage aud approval of the pending measure. Bat there ie nothing in the statement of ALDRICH'S expert. ——The special water committee have practically completed their award of con- tracts for the building and equipment of the new municipal electric plant and most of the oontracts have been drawn up and signed, so that there is now every assur- ance thas the plant will be built at as early a date as possible ; bat at that it will be several months before it will be completed. —— Former residents of Centre and Clear- field county now living in Cambria county joined in the festivities of an Old Home Day celebration at Sunset park, Barnesboro, yesterday. On the committee on invitations were such well known men as W. H. Sand- ford, J. R. Musser, J. T. Slinger, land Deringer and J. E. Kauffelt. ~The wheat market will not lie still, as wag, evidenced in the jump in the price of July wheat on Wednesday from $1.20 t0 $1.27 ; a price that makes the farmers wish they bad this year’s orop ready to market. Advertise in the WATCHMAN. doubt the Presidens believes that the sesy Wood- | Be From the Pittsburg Sun. Speaker Cannon has disregarded dent in appointing membars conference committee and order to assure a thoroughly sult. When the conferees of the committee. . There was mach bot talk in the House yesterday over the unparallelled encrosch- ment by the Senate upon prerogasives of the popular branch iu the framiog of a revenue bill. A substantial Republican miuority youl against ocoalerence and swear they will vote against any report that does not ize the constitution, the honse principles and the epirit of the Chicago platform. ‘ But these insurgents of she Middle West are undergojog a terrific strain. Toe ‘‘maguificent discipline’ of she Republi. can party is being exerted on them to the Seno. Tee pany lash eng. arty regularity is being a to. Most # alpen of the sitnation is the Aldrich with Taft as soon as the latter returned so Wash- ington from the Champlain ceremonies. Talt’s words in the past are what the in. surgents are clinging to, even the Aldrich familiarity at the White House bodes them ill. Undoabtedly if the constituents of these insurgents, all who waot a fairer tariff deal than the Senate and House stand- patters are going to give, will at once write Tals, write their congressman their wishes in the matter, great aud hop pressure will thereby be exerted where it will do tlie most " Vastly more than the echedales is at stake. Partyitm is in the balance. Should the Cannon-Aldrich arm work suo- ceed now is will take a much harder fight the next time to break is up. If Taft will only stand by his word in- stead of with Aldrich ! He basa lot of party destiny in his hands ; what is he going to do with it ? ET —— Where Will Extravagance Cease? From the Boston Traveler. The tariff is enacted with oyunical indif- ference to the necessities of the people on the excuse that income must be provided to meet the governments expenses, and all sorts of extravagant schemes are embarked upon to make the exaction of the tariff ex- cansable. ! No soheme involving immense national expenditare is too extravagant for politi. cians : the irrigation of weber toad, he drainage of southern territories ; the canali- zation of rivers upon which but little traffio floats ; public buildings for little towns and villages that mighs sait cities ; the multiplication of bureaus and employes for meddling with en and industry, aud bandreds of other unnecessary and useless ventures are called for ; and the man who finally pays all the bills, the man with the dinner pat, appears to be as dumb ae be is negligible. When will this riot of extravagance cease ? There must be a time close at band when the back of the American camel will refuse any additional load, and habits of thrift aud economy appear to be bard to learn. It is about time the plain, workaday American woke up ; his rulers are olosing the markets of the world to him ; the party in power and its industrial parasites are eating him up at home ; our national re- sources are being wasted, and it will not be long bafore the richest land in the world will be destroyed by the folly and extra oe of its government and the dumbness and etapidity of its workers. Let us wake up and read the riot aot to oug rulers. Government as administered by the Republican party and aided and abetted by a degenerate Democratic party is as wasteful and baneful as a Fourth of July celebration ; and its elements seem to be about the same—noise, folly, extiava- gance, horn-tooting and utter disregard for She rights, comfort and wishes of the pa. tion. Name Good Candidates. From the Harrisburg Star-Independent. The time for the meeting of the Demo- cratic State convention and the nomination of candidates for state offices in PPpasition to those selected by the Penrose- MoNichol- Vare Organization draws nearer but as yet no pames of probable or possible candi. dates have been mentioned. It should be easy to find in the party meu of high reputation aod character who would consent to accept nominations against Von Mosobzisker for Supreme Court Justice ; Stober for State Treasurer and Sission for Auditor General. If good men be nominated they shouid be able to place the Organization and its supporters in the pesision of a minority party in Penn- sylvania. It was Presidennt Taft who de. olared tbat the Republican majority in the was putting the party at large into seconnd by reason of the inigui. tous revision of the tariff. The inner circle of the party in this State has affronted the people with its selection of candidates, and the Tals asseveration applies here, with re. gard to second Place. It those candidates be placed in the of fices for which they have been nomivated their election will he a glorious victory for the Machine which the people turned out of an important fiscal office four years ago and which in consequence was compelled to nominate reputable candidates for State offices in subsequent campaigns until this year. There will be a return to the die. graceful conditions thatshamed the Com- monwealth prior to the election of Mr. Try. As the “‘Pablic Ledger,” of Philadel. phia, said several weeks ago, the Demoora- tio party can eerve the people of the State by preventing a return to gang _ rule in the government. The electors of the majority party are ready for revolt and rebellion against the gang and its nominees. They will enppoit good cacdidates. Here is the Demooratic opportunity. ~—Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. spawls from the Keystone. ~~There were sixty-eight deaths in Jobns~ town during the mouth of June. —Northbampton borough is to have two new silk mills, each employing £00 operas tives. — There are at the present time 750 ime mates in the Huntingdon reformatory. The last conzecutive number is 6.809. —A new trolley line is being surveyed be- tween Slippery Rock and Grove City. They line is estimated to cost $220,000. —Columbia county farmers complain that their potato crops will be ruined if the drought continues aucther week. ~The Federal Cigar company, of Lancas- ter, which suspended operations six months ago, will resuwe August 1 with 900 hands. —The Pittsburg-Buffalo company has closed the deal for 60,000 acres of coal lands in the Ten-Mile creek fleld, Washington county. —Sunbury women would like to haves talk with a stylishly costumed, smooth- tongued woman, who separated them from $300 last week by working the old-time dress pattern swindle. —Charles T. Philips, aged 25 years, of Ty. rone, was sent to the Pasteur iustitute, in Philadelphia, on Saturday night as a result of being bitten by a mad dog in that place on Thursday, of last week. -Mike Hippler, while on his way to the jail at Clearfield on the charge of wife-beat~ ing, made good his escape, was recaptured at Pittsburg and taken to Clearfield by Cen stable Tucker, the man whom be eluded. —A large number of citizens of DuBois wet recently and formed an organization, the object of which is to enforce the laws of this. Commonwealth. The curfew law is one that will come under their resolution. — Fierce forest fires causing thousands of dollars loss near Shamokin, were conquered by a detachmeat of the state police and em ployes of the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron company, after raging seventy-two hours. —In order to further husband the water supply, the mayer of Johnstown, Alex Wil* son, bas been notified by the water depart- ment that the sprinkling of streets, except in the central part of the city, must be dis- continued. —It is said that Pittsburg and Philadel phia capital is interested in a project for the construction of a third- rail line from Hazle- ton to Pottsville. A party of capitalists is reported to have the proposed route sarvey- ed some time next week. ~Miss Goldie White, of Lewistown, may not recover from the effects of a senseless prank played on her by a young man escort? They were at a carnival and the lad forced 8 quantity of coafetti into the young wo- man’s mouth. causing her to have a choking fit, followed by hysterics. —On Saturday afternoon four young Lock Haven men started on a canoe trip from their home town to Baltimore, a distauce of about 245 miles. The travelers are Tim Hanna, Edward Brown, Lester Pathberger and Dick Schroat. They expect to reach | their destination by Friday. ~—Fourteen cows that had tuberculosis were killed in Beading. They were dis- covered in the herd of a Berks county far- mer, fourteen proving affected out of seven- teen. Three other herds are said to have the same disease and Dr. Otto G. Noack will make a thorough investigation. —F. Blair Isenberg and James 8. Woods of Huntingdon, and George C. Wilson, of Tyrone, have disposed of their stock, and retired as directors and officers of the Juni- ata Valley Electric Street Railroad company, of Huntingdon. It cannot be learned wheth- er there is any signification to the deal. —Conemaugh and Franklin, two boroughs near Johnstown, are threatened with a wa- ter famine, their reservoir being nearly dry. A new well bas been drilled and with this, as soon as the pumping machinery is fixed up, the towns are beped to be supplied. Otherwise there will be a water famine. —The local police have been asked to watch for Joseph Gon, a foreigner at Johns- town. Gon is described as being 26 years old, 5 feet 9 incheg tall, weighs 170 pounds aud wore a biue suit, black soft hat, light blue shirt collar attached, and has a reddish mustache, the ends of which are turned up. ~The new Penneylvania railroad creosot- ing plant was opened in Mt. Union on Fri- day and it exceeded all expectations. It was found to have just just double the capac. ity that was expected of it. Each tie was expected to be ready in five hours bat it was found that only two were needed for the treatment. The ohject of this treating is to iengthen the life of railroad ties. —Robert Billet, of Lamar, was on his way to the market at Lock Haven and bavinga heavy load of produce, stopped to allow his horse to rest. An individual approached him and said “I want your money.’ Billet pretended not to hear and the would be highwayman came a little closer and repeat. ed bis demand. Billet let his fist fly at the fellow, remarking. “All right,” and then whipping up his horse drove rapidly from the scene, the victor. ~—Miss Sadie Forsythe, who married Wil- liam Eatly yesterday at Washington, on Friday morning was awakened by some one shouting to her that her flance wished to see her. Dressing, she went down stairs and was pounced upon, bound and gagged by two men. Hustling her into a buggy, ber unknown assailants took her three miles away from home and placed her besides road. There she was found, and a search was instituted for the culprits. --After more than twenty years of adven* ture during which he wandered as far as Honolulu and supported himself principally by sign painting aud paper hanging the Rev. John Taggart, a Methodist minister, who was thought to have been drowned in the Johnstown flood in 1859 returned to his home in Bloomsburg on Monday. Taggart found that his wife during his absence had mrrried John Van Horn and has a 7 year old son and 15 year old daughter but that Van Horn is in the Columbia county jail serving a sentence for a statutory offense. Mrs. Van Horn was overjoyed to see her former hus- band and Taggart will remove the family to another city. He gives as the reason for his long absence the ‘gossip of the townspeople and ill- health.”