om — a ————— Deusorai atc BY FP. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —And we cau’t beat Tyrone, even with a olub. —The nights are growing longer. How pice for the bridge fiends. —The mortality under chlornform is one in ten thousand, but few people care to take a chance even against such good odds. —A firm of Kentucky counterfeiters bad an office on Wall street. They probably thought that “birds of a feather flock to- gether.” —— Bellefonte is not out of basehall en- tirely and the people of the town will yet have sn opportunity of seeing one or Iwo good games bere. —How in the world does the law ex- peot to keep booze out of dry States when it oan’s keep it out of such places as the western penitentiary. —Holding up railroad trains in Central Pennsylvania looks like the effete East hae determined to show that the West ban’ so much on it after all. —Now 18 the sime when the church fes- tival bill changes from ‘ice cream and oth- er delicacies of the season’'’ to ‘‘oysters gerved in every style.” —At last the QUAY monument has been ordered on to Harrisburg. As a sentinel mute before the palace of graft we can conoeive of nothing more fitting. ~The pleasant things the Lock Haven papers are saying to Renovo just now are only exceeded by the pleasant things the Renovo papers say to Lock Haven. —A professor at Corneil says insect pests cost the larmers of the country seven han- deed million dollars a year. We didn’t know zoologists were so bigh priced. —That Pittsburg religious society that proclaims the milleoniam to be only five years off is considerate. at least, in so far as it gives everyone ample time in which to get ready. —TUnited States Senator OLIVER is to be ope of the political attractions at the Granger's picnic. The machine is evident. ly casting an anchor to the windward of the farmer vote on the coming campaign. —JonN GOLIGRTLY bas resigned as col- leotor of costs for the Luzerne county court. He coaldn’s collect enough to pay his own salary. If there is anything in a vame it was wrong to give JOHN such a beavy job. —The real sport nowadays seems to be the fellow who works a pass into the base- ball game, bets a quarter on the home team, and, it it loses, pats io the ress of the week ‘‘orabbin’’ at the mavagement and the players. VOL. 54 at Schoemviile. Atrocities The investigation of the obarge of peon- age at the Pressed Steel oar company, Sohoenville, pear Pistaburg, appears to he developing some sorprises. The hearings are being held io the Federal building, Pittebarg, and on the first day, Saturday last, the proceedings were public. As the close of thas session, however, is was an- pounced that no farther public hearings would be had and since then it bas been a Star-cbamber affair. The United States Distrios Attorney has been in attendance at all the sessions and the promise bas been given that the evidence *‘will later on be silted,” and that all the facts will be laid belore the grand jury. Itie expected that this promise will serve until alter the elec: tion. After that the people ‘‘oan go bang.” Some of the testimony adduced during the only public hearing was actually start- ling. The first witness declared that he didn’t know that he was hired as a strike breaker and when, upon arrival at the plant, the fact was disclosed to bim he ‘wanted to leave the plant.” When be got to the gate, he adds, he ‘was held back by the goards’’ and when he asked for his money, to quote him literally, ‘a goard rao up and struck me over the head with a blackjack. I was unconscious for ten minutes,” he declared. Another wit- pess testified that had seen the assault thos described and when be asked for belp for the viotim of the crime he was told “it be interfered he would get his head kuocked off ' He added thas ‘‘he had seen | men beaten wost brutally when they were | hangry and asked for a piece of bread.” FRANK CLANCY testified tbat he bad been hired in Chicago as a boss bricklayer and bad heen told shat the job was in Indiana. When he got inside the stockade be found others who bad been similarly deceived aud wanted to get away. “That pight,”’ continued Mr. CraNcy, “Sam COHEN came to me and eaid I'd get $100 extra if I'd ges the men to stay. I sold bim I woaldn’s. Then he pulled a gun aud shoved it against my stomach.” ARTHUR HENNING also testified that he bad Jbeen assaulted by one of the guards with a blackjack and GUSTAV VOGEL swore that on an occasion “300 of the strike breakers —Boats of the French navy are at target practice now and eo ekilifal bave their gan- pers become that they oan hit each other. Ob Tuesday the Gloire pumped six shells into her sister ship Marseillaise before it was discovered that their aim was so bad- —The thought of one man holding up a Pennsylvania R. R. passenger train in the hears of Pennsylvania seems so much like a joke thas few people will give tbe high. wayman the full measure of credit for the nerve that pulled the job off eo succesefal- ly. _—There were thirteen bandred flights made by air ships assembled for the inter- national contest at Reims, France, and not a single person was killed. Give the “joy wagons'’ thirteen hundred chances like that and the undertakers would have to do some overtime working. —English upper circles are circulating the story that the Dake of MARLBOROUGH is rather anxious to resume friendly rela. tions with his wife, who will be remember- ed as Miss CONSUELA VANDERBILT. Prob- ably it is not so much the lady herself that the Englishman wants as her pocket-book. —From the 12th to the 16th will be Old Home Week in Philipsburg and already we oan see the countless good old scouts who will be back to talk it all over with those who have spent all of their days in the burg. It ought to be a great event for Philipsburg and we know no effort of the people there will be lacking in making it 80. —The ballot you will vote in the tall will be 42x24 inches in size, without the addition of the county ticket which will probably make it a few inches lounger. It is all occasioned by the coustitutional smendments that bave to bs voted on. Here is a blanket ballot, for sare, One that will be large enough to cover yom should you fall asleep in the booth while studying it out. —JoHN PARKER, the Pittsburger who courted one of win sisters eloped with bis love only to find out after they were mar- ried that it was not his love at all, but her sister. We presume JOHN will be happy enough because it MARY looked good to him CrciLIA must look equally good, since they looked so much alike that their moth- er was never certain of which was which without looking at their teeth. —Well. De. Cook has done what no man accomplished before him. He has dis- covered the North pole, and planted the American flag there. It ie a great triumph for science, but inasmuch as the hoped for open sea is not there i ie a question wheth- er the seven hundred and Gfty-four lives thas are known to have been sacrificed in North pole expeditions are paid for in the discovery that it is nothing bat everlasting foe. attempted to leave the plaotiv a body, bat when they got to the gate they were stopped by armed guards.” Among these guards, this witness testified, were troop: ers,’ meaning the state constabulary. Another witness testified thas wheo he wanted to quit he was told §by COHEN that he'd call the ‘‘sroopers’’ to shoot bim down.” To the shame of Pennsylvania it mast be said that we are obliged to go out of the State lor the evidence of these atrooities. We have newspapers in Pennsylvania which pretend to be Democratic and as. sume to be fair, and some gave a portion of the testimony in their news coluamos. But all that whioh referred to the perversion of power by the state constabulary was care. fully ont out. We quote from the New York World of Sunday which appears to be beyond the reach of the corrupting agents of the iniguitous trasts and tariff-pampered corporations. The Philadelphia papers are not thos independent and if Pennsylvania Democrats must look to New Yorki{for the real news it might be a good idea to look to that source for all information. ————————— Etther Stupid or Culpable. The Pennsylvania railroad paid its tax on gross receipts into the State Treasury, the other day, the amount being $173,000 in round figures. A few days previously the same company paid $1,000,000 into the treasury, being the amount of its tax on capital stock. Otber corporations bave been paying their taxes freely aud the total volume of receipts during the past couple of months bas been exceptionally large. The balance in the geveral fond at the close of business for July was pearly $8,000,000, though most of the school ap- propriations bad been paid. The indica, tions are that the balance at the close of August, the facts are not accessible at this writing, will be as great as a month ago. These figures plainly show the absurdity of the action of the Governor in outting down appropriations, contrary to law, alter the close of the session of tbe Legislature. There were appropriation bills passed dor- ing the session which ought to have been vetoed, items in the general appropriation bill which ought to hove been out ont and the constitution provided a way to acoom- plish that result. Bat the present balance in the treasury and the liberality of cur- rent payments of taxes clearly prove that all the appropriations made for just and worthy purposes might have been paid in full without impairiug the oredit of the Commonwealth or, which is worse, violat ing the constitution of the State. While Governor STUART was deliberat- ing on the question of cutting down appro- priations in violation of the constitution, the WATCHMAN admovished bim against such a misteasance in office. We pointed ont that the revenues avd balance on hand BELLEFONTE, PA. woald be ample to pay all —— that ‘‘it was none of his business’’ and that | STATE RIGHTS AN tbat ought to be paid, and that the greatest of all dangers toa State comes from ope lawfal purposes. A pumber of esteemed contemporaries joined in this wholesome admonition but the Governor paid no at- tention. He proceeded to violate She con- stitation which he bad sworn to ‘‘support, obey and defend,” avd unless he is very stupid that action was exceedingly cal- pable. Democratic and Republican Recreants. The exuberance of youth and the enthu- siasm of inexperience, taken together, may serve to excuse the editor of the Republican for his recent faux pas in discussing the re- lationship of Judge MOSCHZISKER to the preposterous decision affirming the validi- ty of the act of assembly, whioh increased the salaries of judges in commission. “If, as the WATCHMAN so indignantly avers,” declares our contemporary. ‘‘thie con- struction of the act was a ‘perversion of power,’ it should have carried its indigoa- tion a little farther and sold the whole sto- ry. Is should bave explained that none other than SAMUEL GusTINE THOMPSON, of Philadelphia, tbat well known and dis. tinguished Demoorat, while on the Sau- preme court bench, wrote sod banded down the opinion affirming the decision of Judge Vox MOSCHZISKER." If our esteemed youug contemporary bad studied the columne of the WATCHMAN a8 prayerfully as he appears to have read a single article bypocritically, be would bave learned monthe ago that the WATCHMAN Aid “frankly say s0,”’ aud that it condemn: i ed Justice THOMPSON quite as vehemeotly it cepsnred Judge VON MOSCHZISKER. Not only that bus we pointed out the sigoifi- cant fact that while Justice THOMPSON was universally reprohated by his party at the time and bas ever since heen held as a pol- itical recreant, Judge VON MOSCHZISKER has been generously rewarded by the me- chine which manages his party, the latest favor bestowed being the nomination for an office upon which, in the event of his election, his reputation would cast re- proach. Justice THOMPSON has been prop: erly consigned by bis party to oblivion. Judge VON MOSCHZISKER bas been osten- iatiously honored by bis political associ. ates. Since this subject has heen again brought within the focos of the limelight it may be appropriate to add that the judiciary of the State was ‘‘electioneered’’ for weeke before two Jadges could be found to ren- der a decision so obvionsly absurd. The language of the constitution is so palpable, the intent of the lramers of the instrament was 80 olearly expressed in the debates of the convention and the principles of jus tice and equity are so plainly revealed in previous decisions relating to other offices, that po man endowed with reasoning pow- er could fail to noderstand that such a de- cision would bribg obloguy and contempt trom all fair-minded men. Bat the prom- ise of preferment inflaenved one and other considerations probably the others concern. ed in the iniquity. Fowler and Cannon. Itisa great pity that Representative FowLER,0f New Jersey, delayed his denun- ciation of Speaker CANNON nutil after the onmmittees for the present Congress had been aopounced. For several years Mr. FOWLER bas been chairman of the House Committee on Banking and Currency and bas given much thought to the subjeots which are considered by that committee. Daring the closing period of the last Con- gress, however, he joined ic a movement organized by other distinguished gentle: men of the House to curtail the power of the Speaker aud at the opening of the special session of the presens Cougress au- pounced himsell as a candidate for Speaker in opposition to CANNON. For these reasons Speaker CANNON ap- poiuted another to the chairmanship of the Committee on Baokiog and Currevoy. There may bave been other reasons and it bas beeu freely charged that the gentleman chosen by the Speaker for the office. Mr. VREELAND, of New York, is ove of the agents of the Standard Oil company on the floor of she House, just as Senator AL- DRICH, chairman of the Finance Commis- tee of the Senate, is agevt for that trust in that body. Bat Mr. FOWLER prelers to attribute his humiliation to the reasous first enumerated, and proceeds to adminis ter a castigation which is the more severe because it is entirely just and deserved. He pictures CANNON as a coarse, arrogant and insolent boss. Everybody who has even casually ob- served the methods of CANNON recognizes the accuracy of FOWLER'S estimate, but just as might have been expected, CANNON sets it aside with the statement that it is the raving of a disappointed man and all the underlings of the congressional wa- and there never was a more servile organization, echo bis reply. Thoughbtfal people will not be deceived, of course, but thoughtful e are in the minority and it is to be feared that the good effect of what ie really cou pablic service will be lost because of the Speaker’s oppor- tunity to thus Llow it away. FOWLER may return to the attack, however, aad it he does be will have public sympathy with m. Spry D FEDERA L UNION. Pushing the Quay Monument. bave rarely bad inclination and never belore opportunity to coincide with the opinion of DAVE LANE on any ques tion of public interest. Mr. LANE is the antithesis ef everything that makes for po- | litical morality or sivic righteousness. In admonishing municipal officeholders, a fzw years ago, that unless each of them polled five votes at the epsuing election, they would all lose sheir jobs, be expressed his real notion of official obligations. Follow- ing his suggestion involved the stuffing of ballot boxes, of course, but that made no difference to him or his party. In fact is may be said that because of the laxity of his political morals he is honored by his party ae ite guide and that the chairman ship of the Republican city committee bas been literally forced upon him, on account of his fitness, thus revealed, for the pecul. iar duties of that office. Bat in bis determination to compel the State Board of Public Grounds and Build- ings to carry out the conspiracy of the oc- odpants of the Boas mansion, Harrisburg, during the legislative session of 1905, and the then occupant of the executive man: sion, to erect an effigy of the late Senator MATTHEW STANLEY QUAY in or adjacent to the ‘‘palace of grals,”’ in that city, we are constrained to believe he is righs. It is true that so long as the present political machine controls she public life of the Com- monwealth no monument in marble or effi- gy io bronze is needed to keep his memory fresh. The acts of she Legislature and the 1 { We proceedings of the conventions of his party are better monuments of QUAY than any | artist of ancient or modern times conld form in bronze or put upon canvas. The pomination of Siate Senator SISSON and former State Sepator STOBER, for example, for offices which will entitle them to seats on the Board of Public Grounds and Build- ings, was a higher tribate to the memory of QUAY than she construction ol a bun- dred monuments in marble. It is eminently fis, moreover, that Mr. LANE should lead in the agitation to be stow a dubious honor on the memory of Quay. Mr. LANE ought to be active in the movement to canonize the iniquities of a period which was kiud to him. He bas grown very rich, potwithstandiog a pro- longed life of expensive luxaries, ons of what might be termed the osufroct of Quayism, and it is natural that he would like to see the system coudoned through a mouument to QUAY. If Quay bad been caught belore the statute of limitations could he made available for purposes of im- munity, there would be no advocates of a monument for him now. Bat he was able to postpone the prosecution for his oconsti- tational misdemeanors until the limitation bad run against punishment and conse quently bas, as he deserves to bave, the ad- miration of DAVE LANE and bis kind. Mr. Bringhurst's Easy Comsclence. City Treasurer BRINGHURST, of Phila delphia, might as well bave allowed his conscience to continue the peaceful sleep in which is had been indulging for several gears. He accomplished nothing by the brief awakening expressed in his recent letter to chairman LANE. He told Mr. LANE a few startling truths, noquestion- ably, and it he bad the courage to pursue the subject to its logical conclusion, be might bave aroused other consciences and achieved much good. Bat he was unequal to the emergency. He lacks the moral fibre whiob produces results and upon the first sigo of resistance be quietly dropped back into bis former state of moral torpid- ity. He is obviously a tour-flusher. Mr. BRINGHURST in on open letter to chairman LANE, the other day, protested against the policy of the political machine of Philadelphia, in refusing to open ballot boxes of voting districts in which is is al- leged fraudulent votes were cast or false returns made, at the recent primaries, in the interest of the Republican machine candidate for District Attorney. The re- fusal, Mr. BRINGHURST alleged, cast a shadow upon the integrity of the candi- date’s title to the nomination, and is rep- rebensible in various ways. To this ac- cnsation Mr. LANE repiied that there were no frands perpetrated eitber in the votes or the returns in question, for he bad in. terrogated the ward leaders on the enbjeot, and they bad all given him assurance that the vote was honest and the returns acocun- | rate. | Thereupon Mr. BRINGHURST obligingly withdrew his acousation, practically, and proceeded to eulogize not only the Repub- lican candidate for District Attorney but the members of the Republican machine, in a subsequent letter, thus converting his accusation into an argument in behalf of the ticket which be bad previously as- persed. Mr. LANE could hardly bave ask- ed for a more effective campaign docament, for, whereas, the obarge conveyed the im- pression of an outraged conscience, the apology was a oonfession of a Sapidiey which did injustice to the b mind gentlemen who compose the bhlican machine. Honest men have mote to fear from that sort of reformers than from pro- fessional ballot box stuffers. BER 3, 1909. | | ae | NO. 85. i _ nr | The stupendous Fraud of 1909 and | the Need of New and Honest Leaders. From the Netraska State Capital, Republican. The new Aldrich tariff bill is one of the greatest frands ever perpetrated ou the American people. Jt is in no way what she Republican party promised iu the last campaign. [tis a raise in tariff rates ahove those of the Divgley tanfl of more thav 3 per oent. Yet a swarm of congressmen and senators, part of them orooks aud part of them block: heads, voted for the bill, avd sent word bome to their coustituents that it was a ‘nearly perfect bill’ and “‘a great im- provement.” The ready-made clothing of meu avd boys gets a raise of $125,000,000 a year. That is about $4 apiece extra. That is one “jmprovement.’’ The cotton and woolen cloths, and the ready-made clothing bought by women, all ges raised in price. That is another '‘iw- provement.” "There were over 4,000 items in tbe tariff bill. President Tals asked for changes in eight of them. He gained his point in five and sigued this “almost perfeot’’ bill. On the face of the bill the increase in revenue is $4,188,480, But there are im- portant reductions along the line. If any of Jou common people in Nebraska want to buy steel rails, or arsenic, or iron ore, or some rawhides for chemical and me- chanical purposes, you come in for the benefit of the lower tariff. If you are build- ing and want some flooring rough on both sides, or some ceiling unplaned and with out grooves, you can get some of the ‘‘ben- efits.” But when you go to your stores and buy the common necessities of life yon will have the pleasare of paying higher all along the line. In this the m ts are helpless. They have already received notice from the jobbers and manuvfactarers of the higher prices. The average redaction in the sugar sched- ules is one-fiftieth of 1 per cent. Remew- ber that when you buy your sugar avd pay - spawis from the Keystone. —Notwitbstanding the fact that several things have happened which threatened to destroy it, the peach crop this year in the vicinity of Everett, promises to be a record breaker. — As the steel! business is now flourishing so are the brick manufacturers and Mt. Union is feeling the prosperous wave. The two plants average twenty cars of fire brick a day or shout 126 car loads per week. —Lewistown property owners are suffering from the depredations of fruit thieves, who help themselves to the ripening apples, pears aud plums. The outraged property owners threaten to shoot if they catch the lawless | invaders. ~The Huntingdon pin mill is very pros percus st the present time, and orders are still coming in. Fifteen men are now em- ployed, aud au nverage of 63.000 wooden pins a week is the output of the factory. L. M. Rbodes is in charge ~The plant of the Palmer Window Glass company, which failed at Shingle House for $325,000, was oid at trustees’ sale for $70,- 000, to first wortgage creditors. The validity of the bounds will be tested in court. The plant will be operated. —Among the floats in Huntingdon's floral day of Old Home Week will be a locomotive made of flowers, entered by the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. A wooden ship with flowers growing in it will be the offer- ing of the veformatory. —Thomas Armstrong, of Philipsburg, has been elected superintendent of the C. and C. Steel Railway company and the Philipsburg Electric Light company. He assumed his office on September 1st and will succeed Harry Beck, who has resigned. —~Mis. W. A. Stone, wife of a prominent citizen at Uniontown, who mysteriously dis- appeared from ber home on December 20d and eluded all attempts of detectives to locate her, has returned to her husband's home. They will not tell where the woman was. —1It 1s believed that there are 1,500 feet of oil standing in the abandoued No. 3 well of the Union Oil snd Gas company, at East Waterford, Juniata county. The company will make an investigation and if there 1s oil in any quantity to be found drilling will be recommenced. —80 many stories have come to the divi- sion of economic zoology of the state depart ment of agriculture of the finding of speci. wens of & so called horn tailed snakes, that Professor H. A. Surface, head of the division, has offered a reward of $50 for one. He says there is no such reptile. whatever price the trust dictates. It you want the official figores, showing the exact rate on every item of the new tariff, and is comparison with the Diogley tax, ask your congressman to get for youn Senate Documents 155 aud 156. Don’t take the word of any oheap politician, or any hungry office-bunter, or any sneakiog whiffet of an Omaha editor, but get the official figures, and get them guick. Then, while you are digging down into into your pookets for the increased price of the things you must pay, remember tbat a state convention inasruoted the Nebraska delegation to vote for whatever tariff was put up to them by a president who bad given iv buta casual examiustion Re. member that a gang of blockheads in that convention thought more of catching trains for home than they did of the wellare of the people of Nebraska whom they pre tended to represent. What the Republicans of Nebraska need is honest, able and cou leadership. What we need is a solid delegation in Washington Pledged to wipe ont Cannoa- ism and Aldrichism and pledged to restore actual representative government to the people. There are good and able men in Nebras- ka—as good and as able as in any other state in the union. Les them be called forth to serve. Let us bave open war now against the interests that are combined to ohoke the life out of the country. Give ue some real men. Home of Free Trade, Manchester Cor. Philadelphia Record. And now I am in the very hears of this “decadent” industrial isle. It throbs avd sends she life-blood to all the capillaries of trade throughout the empire. Manohester is the centre of the moat denseiy-populated and the most active district in : You thought London was ; but London jsn’t a circumstanse, cooeidering the area. Moreover, Manchester is the biggest mauu- facturing centre iu the world. I thoughs I bad in my time seen some cotton mills—along the Piedmont slopes of the Carolinas and lining the streams of New England. I thought there were some smoking factory chimueys in Pennsylvania and ’round about New Jersey, and thas the laundryman bad a cinch in Pittsburg. But I was mistaken as to their numbers. Like the fellow in the old frog yarn, who Promised several carloads of frogs, I was eceived by the noise they made—that is, speaking comparatively. Yesterday I cyoled ap a hill oo the out- skirts of this smoking city from which, but for the very density of them, I might bave counted five hundred tall, towering “‘policeman’s hille’’ chimneys of cotton mills alone, to say nothiog of the nomer- ous ones of other sorts of factories. mind you, was in one vicinity alone. Re- marking to the American vice consul, Mr. Thomas, who at present is in charge of the consulate, that I wanted to visit the cotton mill district, be smiled. “You can go out ov any road for 10 miles and see unbroken lines of cotton mills in every direction,” he said. The 50 miles at Oldham form only one of the groups on one of the roads. Aod roads mean paved city streets. Going to these numerous towns, or ‘corporations,’ as they are called, from the center of Man: chester. there is no break in the continuity of the houses in the solid blocks of brick ; the road is continuously paved with Bel- gian blocks, and sumerous factory chim- peys tower from behind the shops and dwellings al the way. Did It Ever Happen to Yom? From the Pittsburg Post. Did you ever have the business end of an ugly goo poked at you suddenly and altogether unexpectedly by an entire and not at all ng stranger who was ina hurry to annex a lot of money that didn’t belong to him and who wanted your help or at least your entire compliance and noun-resistance and did you succeed in baf- fling the fell intent ? If not you are not at all qualified . to bow much better ac- count you would have given of Jouredt than those trainmen viotims of lone robber of Lewistown did Tuesday morning. —Mrs. J. C. Blair bas added another $10,~ 000 to the gift for the J. C. Blair Memorial hospital now being planned for Huntingdon. This makes a total of $120,000 in the hands of the commission. Work is now being push- ed on the excavations and in September the present force will be doubled. ~Walter Cardon, who was injured by the elevator in the Hotel Dimeling, at Clear~ field, in February, is suing the Clearfield Hotel company for $10,000. The Fidelity and Casualty company, of New York, is the real defendant aud will be obliged to pay any damages that the plaintiff may be awarded, i —The mining region centering around Patton is booming. All the mines of the Poopsylvania Coal and Coke company are working, some to their full capacity, and new men are seen in all the slopes. Forty- seven were given employment in one day at Hastings aud orders are coming in as pleuti = fully as can be expected. —~Samuel Kerr, the young Pittsburg boy who invented a wireless telegraph with which be hopes to surpass Marconi, was honored by a visit by Jack Binus, the wire- less telegraph operator whose heroism on the fated ship, the Republic, stirred up the land. The two will condact experiments with the machinery the boy has built. —The Haws Coal company at Holsopple will double its output in the next few months. It now employs ninety men and sends out 500 tons a day. Double the num- ber of men will be hired and the output will be made 900 tous. The Lin Coal company a¢ Nanty-Glo will also increase its operations. It bas secured options on 100 acres of adjoim- ing territory and will endeavor to get the mining right to 700 acres. —Eight year-old Olive Clark of Maddens- ville. Huntingdon county, had her little baby sister out in a baby carriage and not having a very good hold on tbe handle of the carriage, it slipped from ber grasp and went down over a fifteen foot embankment. There was a creek at the bottom of this, but although the carriage went on into the stream the baby was luckily thrown out and was found on the bank, only slightly bruised as the result. ~The County National bank of Clearfield, bas brought suit in the Cambris county courts against the Barnesboro Water coms pany to recover $4,000 with interest from August 1st, 1909. Ii is alleged that on June 1st, the defendant drew to order of J. LE Spangler and H. F. Bigler, of Bellefonte, and This, | James A. McOiain, of Spangler, promissory note of $4,000 payable August 1st. The gen- tlemen it is claimed endorsed the note, which when payment fell due was protested. —The fifteenth sunusl convention of the Pennsylvania Bankers’ association will be held at Bedford Springs on Tuesday and Wednesday, September 7th and Sth. The program includes a number of addresses by prominent financiers of the state and else- where, and at the banquet the principal ad* dresses will be Dr. Edwin Erle Sparks, presi- dent Pennsyivania State College; Hon. Henry Houck, secretary of internal affairs of Penn~ sylvania, and Thomas B. Holmes, editor of the Trenton, N. J. Gazette. . —Ac~ording to reports issued today, the Relief funds of the Pennsylvania system bave in twenty-three years paid outa total of $26,702, 947.73 in benefits to employes of the railroad. Of this amount, £15 896,425.59 were paid to members who were unable«te work, while the remainder, $10,806,522.19,- was paid to the families of employes who died. Reports for July show payments amounting to $05,202.70 on the lines east of Pittsburg and Erie. To members incapacic tated for work, $50,787.10 were paid, while to the families of members who died there was paid the sum of $38,496.60. The total amount paid out of the Relief fund of fhe lines east of Pittsburg since it was | od tn 1856 is $19,477,986 52.