INK SLINGS. —Governor WILSON seems able to show that he is the majority in New Jersey. —The Cabinet of the Bellefonte council has a vacancy. The Secretary of War has resigned. : —Talk about hard times! One would never believe there could be such things after listening to the bidding on horses and cattle at a farm sale. —New York is arranging for a new statue of Washington. We suppose the old one has worn itself out watching Wall street and its multitude of thieves. —The remodeled bridge on High street will probably be fine on the surface, but it remains for a good, old-fashioned flood on Spring creek to discover how it will be underneath. —A great many of the newly elected Congressmen will probably discover that after the fourth of April they are not nearly so great men as their imagination now makes them. —Anyway, there is room enough in the : Democratic party of Pennsylvania for all the people who want to parade under either the DEWALT or GUTHRIE banner, to getinto the procession. There is no necessity for crowding anybody out. —Pittsburgers know and evidently feel what it is to “sit in darkness,” which has awakened a feeling of sympathy for oth- ers in a similar condition. The church records show that they gave $80,000 to foreign missions the past year. —Milwaukee's water has been declared to be too foul for domestic use—a condi- tion that shouldn't bother the average Milwaukeean a particle. Water in that city is like political honor in Philadelphia, i something it's people know little about. —Still another illustration of the rapid- ity with which our customs develop. An Alaskan bank, holding over $1,000,000 of depositor’s money, has closed its doors and promises to pay its creditors 5 per cent. of their claims. How proud we should be of the emulators we can point to. —New Yorkers are complaining that their senatorial dead-lock has cost that’ State over $90,000. Pennsylvania could pay twice that sum and then save money for a dead-lock that would keep its Legis. | lature out of its treasury for half the time that New Yorkers think has been wasted by their tie up. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 56 Philadelphia Democrats Vindicated. The principal cause of quarrel between the so-called Democratic reformers of Philadelphia and the Democratic organi- zation of that “corrupt and contented” city has been that the organization re- fused to endorse for elective representa- tive offices candidates chosen by paid em- issaries of the PENROSE machine. In 1905, when the Democratic organiza- tion of Philadelphia set itself, at any haz- ard, to defeat the Republican nominee for State Treasurer and elect WiLLiam H, BERRY, the Philadelphia Democratic orga- nization accepted and supported any can- didates which were presented to them by the reformers. That included the nomi- nee for sheriff, WiLsoN H. Brown; for coroner, J. M. R. JERMON, and for State Senator in the Eighth district, VIVIAN FRANK GABLE. We all know what hap- pened. At the first opportunity sheriff BROWN, who owed his election essentially to the organization Democratic leaders, betrayed them in coldest blood and turned the pat- | ronage and influence of his office over to the PENROSE machine. Coroner JERMON scarcely waited until the ink on his com- mission was dry until he offered the in- fluence of his office to the machine. Viv- 1AN FRANK GABLE became a more obedi- | ent too of the PENROSE organization in the special session of 1906 than KEYSER ever was. At the next election these po- litical recreants asked the Democratic or- ganization to again pull machine chest- nuts out of the fire for them. Is it sur- prising that the invitation was declined? Wouldn't it have been an outrage if it had been accepted? To our mind that proposition is established. A year later the element which was responsible for BROWN, JERMON and GABLE nominated ERNEST L. TusTIN for | State Senator and invited the Democratic organization to aid them. The invitation was reluctantly accepted and TUSTIN be- | trayed every obligation of honor in sup- porting the Republican machine. Last If iisety loves company it i fall he stole the Democratic nomination plenty of it among those BRYAN Demo- ¢,. genator, with the aid of the Republi- crats who demanded new leaders and got the D ic ind 1 as bosses of their bunchsuch old time and - and The De A Semis. all the time anti-BRYAN men as VANCEMC- | 100 diated the corrupt conditions. But Cormick and Geo. W. GUTHRIE. Atleast. | ;piery was elected and in the Senate has we don’t hear many hailelujahs! coming | poop the most subservient and sycophantic up from their camp. | instrument of the PENROSE machine who —A Rhode Island newspaper seems has ever sat inthe body. It is now grave- proud to proclaim that the new census |y announced that he is to be the PEN- shows the population of that State to be Rose candidate for mayor of Philadelphia. more “dense” than that of any other! ft js at the same time his reward and State in the Union. That fact has been the vindication ot the Democratic or- impressed upon our mind every time we ganization. And it is because of its re- have thought of the kind of representa- fysal to hip-and-hurrah for these kind of tives they send to Washington. | PENROSE agents—politicians who profess —The Assistant Postmaster General, | to be against the machine until they are | Not a Promising Outlook. In the light of analysis the plan of re- | habilitating the Democratic party adopted | by the packed jury which sat in Harris” burg last week is not promising. The cause of the great falling off in the Dem- ocratic vote last fall was the desertion of members of the party. The stay-at-home vote has been large ever since the cam- paign of 1896. No Democratic candidate for Governor since that time has received anything like a full vote, though it iscon- ceded that in 1902 ROBERT E. PATTISON got 100,000 Republican votes. Last fall, however, in addition to the stay-at-home vote, one-third of the Democratic voters deserted to Mr. BERRY and nearly anoth- er third to TENER, the latter being influ- enced by fear of the effect of Mr. BER- RY'S election on the liquor traffic. In the plan of rehabilitation adopted by the packed jury, of which Vance C. Mc- CORMICK was the dominant spirit, the policy seems to have been to reward these deserters. That was probably nat- ural under the circumstances for Mr. Mc- Cormick was among the deserters and being one of “the holier than thou” types his main purpose was to vindicate him- self. Other deserters had better reasons than he. Some earnestly believed that Mr. Berry was an ideal public official and entitled to the nomination. Others had reasons for their belief that his clec- tion would jeopardize their business in- terests and felt that they had a right to vote for the only candidate who was like- ly to defeat him. But Mr. McCORMICK had no illusions or delusions-on the sub- ject. He knew that Mr. BERRY mentally nor temperamentally fit for the | office. He deserted because of an inces- sant itch for office. The average American citizen believes in fair play. Hundreds of Pennsylvania Democrats may honestly believe that the party leaders whom these conspirators are endeavoring to asperse are inefficient and that other leaders might be found who would serve the purpose better. But no Democrat who honestly believes in the principles of the party and hopes for the success of its candidates is willing to re: ' ward treachery by unjustly punishing one man in order to gratify the ambition and flatter the vanity of a traitor. Until VANCE McCorMICK became a figure in the polit- ical life of Harrisburg the Democratic candidates were occasionally successful: Since that event no candidate of the party has come within hailing distance of elec- tion and the reason is that he opposes Democrats invariably unless he is per- mitted to select the candidates. Pending School Code. Danger in the was neither | _BE LLEFONTE, PA., MARCH 24, 1911. Adopt the Deardon Resolution. The resolution introduced in the House of Representatives at Harrisburg, the oth- er day, by Mr. DeARrDON, of Philadelphia, deserves careful consideration and final passage. The resolution recites that for many years a “system of extraordinary and wholly unwarranted appropriations has been encouraged on a steadily in- creasing scale which has become both po scandalous and alarming.” There can be no doubt of the truth of this statement. The fact was sharply reprobated in the platform of the Democratic party adopted by the Allentown convention last June and was subsequently condemned in the platform of the Keystone party. It is high time that steps should be taken to check it. Every citizen of Pennsylvania favors liberal appropriations to worthy charities, penal institutions and public educational enterprises. But such appropriations should be made upon a just basis and a wise system. The framers of the funda- | mental law of the State tried to secure this result by placing certain restrictions on the Legislature. Of late, however, the restrictions have been entirely ignored. Sectarian institutions and private enter- | prises established for commercial pur- poses have been supported as freely by the Legislature, and upon precisely equal terms, with State institutions conducted ‘by the State and for purely benevolent or ' corrective uses. This is a crime against | the public. Mr. DEARDON'S resolution proposes an | investigation of this evil with the view of correcting it. No greater service could | be performed by the Legislature. It may be said that there ought to be no reason for such an inquiry. The fact is, how- | ever, that the evil exists and the only. ' promise of checking it lies in such a pro- cess as the Philadelphian proposes. It | will cost something, of course. The res- olution provides for an appropriation of $10,000 to defray the expenses. But that is no valid reason for opposing it. If the work is well done it will save for the State a thousand dollars for every dollar it costs. By all means adopt the DEAR- | oN resolution promptly. { ——The Democratic organization of the State is not responsible for the de- | linquencies of the local Democratic or- : ganization in Philadelphia or any other | county. Home rule is a cardinal princi- | ple of Democracy and if the Democratic | committee of Centre county is recreant 'it is amenable to the Democratic voters of Centre county and no one else. In { the recent campaign for Governor the | local organizations in several counties | failed to fulfill their obligations to the who is demanding of magazine publishers that they make their publications lighter, is either not a reader of many of them or is considerable of a block-head! Other- wise he would know that they are already furnishing about the “lightest” kind of | reading that can be palmed ofi upon aj gullible public. | —An exchange, that seems to be keep- | ing its eyes open, says that “se far we haven't seen that re-organizers MCCOR- MICK and GUTHRIE have made any move to go on with the job they elected them- selves to do some two weeks ago.” No, they have possibly discovered that it would cost them something and they have concluded to stay at home and “save their hoard.” and refused to vote for the Democratic | nominee. What a hilarious crowd the | real BRYAN men will be when marching to the discordant music this anti-BRYAN boss will furnish them! —In referring to the evident failure of M:. ROOSEVELT'S present trip over the country, to arouse the enthusiasm of the people, an exchange concludes that he must be “all in.” Just what or where it means that he is “in” we don't exactly know, but we are confident that what. ever, or wherever it may be, the creature or the place has a surfeit of gas about it that it will not get rid of for a very long time. —It took the whole of two full columns in Wednesday's North American for its editor to elucidate, to a doubting and be- fuddled reader, just what he thinks that paper “stands for” and then he didn't succeed to any great extent. The fact is that most people don’t think it “stands’ for anything. It's like an old mare the writer's father had up on his farm at one time. When he wanted her to stand she'd “kick,” when he tried to make her go she'd “kick,” if she got over the traces she'd “kick” or if the line got under her tail she'd “kick;” in fact “kick” she would under any and all circumstances unless Allowed ogo her own Way, and no one was ever enough to discover which way the old thing wanted to go. elected, and for it whenever they succeed | to power—that the Democratic city and | State organization is denounced and op- posed by those claiming to be Democratic reformers. Profligacy of Government. A Pennsylvania Congressman in a speech delivered during the closing period of the recent session asserted that the cost of the government of the United States amounts to nearly half the earn- ings of all the laborers of the country.. The state and local taxes add materially to this burden so that more than half the earnings of labor is squandered by profli- gate administration. No other govern- ‘ment in the world puts such burdens —Mr. VANCE MCCORMICK went clear to | upen its citizenship. No other govern- ment in the history of the world has ever been so unjust. No government however substantial can endure under such con- Denver, only three years ago, and “spend- ed his own munny” in doing so, to fight the nomination of Mr. BRYAN. He came home, not as a Democrat, but a "kicker" ditions and no people however rich and | resourceful can long carry such a load. This profligacy can have no other pur- ' pose than to impoverish the people. It is a part of a conspiracy tosubvert the gov- | ernment and establish upon its ruins an ' oligarchy of wealth in which citizenship will be converted into slavery and em- ployer into master. Poverty makes meek- ness. Want destroys independence and the vast expenditures for army and navy are intended to make the citizens weak and the government arrogant and strong. It is a part of the imperialism which finds expression in dependent colonies and hopeless subjects. It is the logical conse- . quence of the ascendency of men who ' recognize no law other than their own absurd or ambitious caprices. The new Congress promises to introduce reforms in the management of affairs and reduce the expenses of government to a reasonable level. It is said that at least $100,000 can be saved by cutting out the useless offices of Congress and no doubt that is true. But such a saving will be of little consequence unless the The building of useless battleships and the criminal increase of the army must be stopped or else the process of improve- ment will be too slow to overtake the evil. We have faith, however, that the necessary steps will be taken and that before the Sixty-second Congress expires the leaven of reform will be active. No doubt there is a good deal of merit | State organization and deserve punish- in the School code now pending in the ment for the treachery. But under no Legislature. It is also certain that there | principle of law or equity can the State is much need for the codification of the | organization be punished for the recre- “school laws of the State. They represent | ancy of the local organizations and the ox» the patch-work of half a century of ill- digested legislation, sometimes conflict- ing and frequently absurd. Education has become so important a part of the life of the people of this country that it should be regulated with the greatest care and wisdom, moreover. The framers of the School code had this purpose in mind, no doubt. Eminent gentlemen and excellent citizens they would hardly have offered the people anything which they | didn't believe to be meritorious. But we question the accuracy of their judgment with respect to that feature of the School code which eliminates local control of the schools and concentrates the ; power in the Department at Harrisburg. | The tendency of recent legislation both in Washington and Harrisburg has this grave fault. The aim appears to be to | get as far away from the people as pos- . sible. The pending road legislation trends in the same direction. The dependence | upon the state constables to perform the police duty of communities is additional evidence on the subject. Politicians covet power and citizens seem entirely willing to relinquish it to them. To say the least of it that is a dangerous sign. The schools of Pennsylvania have achieved excellent results under the old system of liberal State help but absolute local contrcl. The local school authori- ties have taken just pride in the excel lence of their work. Attempts to intro- | duce politics have been resisted and re- | sented promptly and courageously. Par- tisans in other things have jealously kept i i feared that the change in the methods will work an alteration in this respect results for the consider —Had the late Republican Congress had any care for the real fitness of things it would long since have changed the name of the capital to White Wash—ington. But then some official bodies never do | waken up to what might be appropriate. | the schools out of politics and mainly be- | cause of the local control. It is to be | | attempt to make such a vicarious sacri- | fice is unjust and undemocratic. i ———————" ——The Legislature is rushing things | at Harrisburg now, presumably for the | reason that PENROSE will only have the | interval before the extra session of Con- | gress in which to guide the mummies he has in the Legislature and he wants to | cover as much ground in that period as possible. The Senate passes hundreds of | bills a day. But Lord deliver us from the | kind of legislation that is being ground i | out. i | =A few of the early garden makers | in Bellefonte have already gone to work and the first beds of onions are in the | ground. It won't be long now until gar- den making and house cleaning will be all the go and plenty of husbands in Belle- fonte will have to lay awake nights plan- ning excuses to get out of wielding the | Sate and She Carpet beaker. | =——Up to this writing it is difficult to tell whether the town council and the county commissioners. who have men at | work erecting something in front of the | WATCHMAN office, are trying to build a | 'bridge or to dam Spring creck. The De structure so far looks about as much like | the one as it does the other. | thousand barrels of whiskey were burned | and otherwise destroyed when the big thirsty element of Bellefonte could have had on less than half the above quantity. ——And now Adams county, Ohio, is troubled to find enough of Republican voters, who escaped that bribery net, to make up its election boards for the local The in- elections. In this case the “reward of If this new | virtue” seems to be a scarcity of candi dates. —There was another snow storm on Sunday afternoon and evening, but Mon- day's warm weather got rid of it all. | —eSubscribe for the WATCHMAN, | ——At Bloomsburg on Monday sixteen | NO. 12. The Pennsylvania Democracy. From the Philadelphia Record. A malign fate a to pursue the sadly disorganized of Penn- Sylvania Democracy whose fidelity to party, through years of defeat and default, deserves a better fate. The action on Tuesday last of the joint committee appointed to propose a for the reor- ganization and solidifying of the Demo- cratic party in Pennsylyania will disap- int more voters than it will please. It is impossible for The Record to how any of the seven members compris. ing the committee responsible for - day's action can plume themselves upon the result of their work. Fortunately, however, the game of peanut politics now being played in Pennsylvania cannot do any real harm at present to the party or its interests. Under the uniform pri- maries law a new organization will be se- lected by the voters of the real Demo- crats of the State next June. Any tem- porary advantage gained by any faction by virtue of the slaughter-house methods of Tuesday's committee will be short- lived, unless it shall be approved by the body of voters at the public election. As there will be no State candidates to elect this year, the only issue at the primaries will be the honest, harmonious and effi- cient organization of the party, and from the judgment of the Democratic people then registered at the primary election there can be no a i _It is fortunate that the ambitions and rivalries, new and oid, of leaders, quasi- leaders and would-be will be so promptly submitted to the inquisition and verdict of the bone and sinew of the party at an election under the operation of public laws. “The Record,” which was the leader in the movement to reorganize the party, cannot help feeling and ressing its regret that the opportunity for cement- ing the party and reconstituting its lead- ership upon a harmonious and efficient basis was not seized by the gentlemen to whom that priceless privilege was given last Tuesday. ! The Re-organization Fiasco. From Senator Grim's Doylestown Democrat. If Democratic reorganization in Penn- sylvania means the welding of disunited elements into a strong, ve, har- , with government and the triumph of Democratic principles as its solid purposes, then the reorganiza- tion as attempted by the Committee of Seven at Harrisburg is a misnomer. By a bare majority that committee made the summary deposing of Chai alt and National Committeeman G wy ils only object. It does not matter that the committee attempted to do thisby "steam roller” methods. This was bad enough, but it was only an incident. But the fact that it attempted to depose anybody at all is the vital point. The committee's prerogative extended no farther than to formulate a plan of re- organization, with an implied view to harmonizing the party. No authority was delegated, no authority could be legally delegated, to the Committee of Seven by the State Committee to do what it did, because such action was clearly against the party rules. Being such, it will have no force or effect whatever. The unfortunate part of the whole af- fair is that the committee did not do what every sincere Democrat expected of it, namely, to take such steps as would lead to a reunited party. It had a magnificent portunity to do the party a great ser- vice. Several legitimate courses of action were open, any one of which wouid have been indorsed by the members of the pany in general. This was the time, not or rekindling old animosities between the leaders, but for paving the way for leader- ship in the future. While the committee has thrown away a great opportunity and practically accomplished nothing, there is plenty of time to undo its mistakes. It is to be hoped that the party can yet ac- complish its own reorganization in a reg- ular and orderly way. More Money for tke Gang. From the Johnstown Democrat. On the theory that things must become worse before we can hope to make them better, the Gang plans for adding to the tax burdens of the people of Pennsylva- nia may be welcomed. Certainly some- thing is needed to arouse the masses to a revolt against extravagance, stupidity and ignorance in the use of the taxing power and perhaps the riot mapped out by the Gang will perform this great service. The excuse for increasing taxes is found in the alleged need of the State for ! more revenue. Nos tion of econo- ' my is heard from the Gang. It clamors for more and more. Its hangers-on want more jobs. Its masters want more con- tracts. Its politico-financial allies want better pickings all around. All the insti- tutions and interests which are fed out of demand that more shall And since these for increased reve- nue are little less than monstrous and they mark a distinct step backward. They are unwarranted by the real needs of the State and they are in violent con- flict with the welfare of her Unly men lost to civic interests and blinded to economic truth could for a moment look favorably upon most of the propositions to which the Gang is definitely commit- ted through the recommendations of the McNichol commission. Party Rules Better than “Ripper” Tactics. From the Connellsville News. which has now dertaken to the Democracy Pennsylvania would make conform to party rules “ripper” tactics it migh old rank and file to its to want to harmonize the party,but | dertaking to ride over ‘which have been in control it is only | ting away from its avowed purpose. | 1 ~ f SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Bogus silver dollars have been circulating in portions of eastern Pennsylvania during the past few days. ~Two thousand Butler public schoo! pupils are contesting in a spelling match, divided up into districts of 125 each. —Grove City and Slippery Rock, Butler county, will each raise $75,000 to complete a nine-mile trolley line linking the two. ~The most complete inspection of dairies and dairy herds ever undertaken in Pennsylvania is now under way by officers of the State depart- ment of health. ~The Pennsylvania Fruit Farms compnny has purchased the Dewey orchards and adjoining properties. near Jersey Shore. An experienced superintendent will be put in charge. —Unaffected by the prohibition tide that is sweeping over the country, the South Bethlehem Brewing company is enlarging its brewery so that it will have a capacity of 100,000 barrels. ~Johanna Myers, a girl residing in Coplay, last week lost $90 from her stocking. but is in posses. sion of it again, her brother having found it on the path along which they travel to go to work.’ —August Winter, a resident of Franklin, who had voted for thirty years, was deprived of the franchise by the personal registration act because he could not produce his naturalization papers. ~The outbreak of anthrax in Westmoreland county, just over the line from Indiana. has been completely stamped out, thanks to the prompt action of the cattle owners and of the State Vet" erinary board. —Two women received licenses to sell liquor from the Cambria county court this week. Both: are widows of former landlords. They are Mrs Annie Estep, of Scalp Level, and Mrs. Annabe Glass, of Barn sboro. —After three unsuccessful attempts to burn the home of Constable Solomon Gilbert, of Somerset, incendiaries succeeded on Sunday morning, while Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert were away from home. The loss is over $1,500, with partial insurance. ~There are more than seventy cases of measles at Sandy Lake, Mercer county. Six new cases developed Sunday. The schools have been clos- ed for two weeks and the quarantine will be con. tinued another week. The population of Sandy Lake is about 700. —Only two rafts will come down the west branch of the Susquehanna to Lock Haven this spring, which is strange reading to people who remember how, thirty years ago, that river was filled from bank to bank with logs and rafts at every spring freshet. ~The Superior court has affirmed the action of the Washington county court in sentencing Drug- gist E. G. Dudley, of Washington, to pay a fine of $1,000 and undergo imprisonment in the county jail for five months. Dudley was convicted of vi- olating the liquor laws. —Mine No. 4, at Lovejoy, Indiana county, is be- ing abandoned on account of the amount of water. It was at first thought to be one of the most de- sirable workings in the region, but its dampness made it otherwise. It is probable that fixtures will be removed to Shanktown. —Mrs. E. M. Hutchison, aged 54 vears, of West township, Huntingdon county, was stricken with neuralgia of the face while attending the funeral of her father-in-law, Lewis Hutchison, at Moores- ville, recently. The neuralgia went to her heart, causing her death two hours later. —Mrs. William Goodhart, of Leesburg, Cumber- land county, left her baby playing with a cellu- loid comb while she ran out on an errand to a nearby store. The baby crept to the stove inthe kitchen and when the mother returned the room was ablaze and the child burned to death. —Mrs. W. A. Wallace, widow of former Sena- tor Wallace, died at her home in Clearfield last Saturday. She was aged about 80 years. Her two sons are members of the Clearfield Bar asso- ciation: one of her daughters is the wife of Judge Smith and the other the widow of Judge Krebs. —Acting under instructions from the postoffice department, the postoflice people of Carlisle have just completed a recount of the population of that ancient town, with the resuit that the census fig- ures have been increased from 10.303 to 11.711, not including the inmates of the Indian school or the students at Dickinson college. ~The Harbison-Walker Refractories comoany, of Woodland, have just finished for their Wood- land clay mine, after seven months’ werk a shaft seven fect in diameter and 160 feet deep. Cons'd- erable water was encountered during the process of sinking. which retarded the work. The shaft will be used for ventilating purposes, ~The Cambria Steel company’s new wire mill will be in full operation next month and the Penn- sylvania Railroad company has men at work con- structing new yards at the lower end of Morrell ville. The work involved the razing of the old station at Sheridan, which had been an old land mark quite long enough to be historic. —~Options have been taken on about 1.000 acres of iand along Slippery Rock Creek, in Butler county. between Kennedy's Mills and MeCon- nell's Mills, just west of Portersville, and it is re- ported a huge power plant is to be constructed. Eastern capitalists are back of the ven‘ure. The company is to furnish electricity for lighting and motor power in New Castle and Elmwood City. —Mrs. Susan Brenneman, proprietress of the Valley house, Lewistown, celebrated the Bist an- niversary of her birthon Monday. She spent the day at her usual occupation, supervising the culi- nary department of the hostelry she has owned for forty-two years. Her friends congratulated her on her good health and activity and wished her a continuance thereof. She received more than a hundred post cards. —A peculiar malady has broken out among the chickens of William H. Snyder, of Dallastown, York county. Within the past two days a num- ber of them have died from apparent fatness. The flesh bursts along the breastbone and they bleed to death. Beyond the fatness the chickens are as healthy as possible. Their combs are red and when the chickens are cut open after death they show no internal sickness. —Marshall, the nine-year-old son of J. Frank Vanbuskirk, was frozen to death near Lewistown last Friday. The boy had accompanied his fath- er in moving household goods from Lewistown Junction to Alfarata when a spring broke on wagon. The lad was left with the wagon while the father proceeded to Alfarata with a borrow- ed wagon, On returning he found the boy un- conscious from cold. He died shortly after reach- ing Alfarata. —John Calvin Louder, aged fifty-nine years, a prominent citizen of Huntingdon and member of the school board, was killed in the planing mill of that place just before quitting time on Friday evening. His son was feeding lumber into a saw and the end of the board, as it came through, struck his father over the heart. Three ribs were crushed and his death was instantaneous. He His widow, one daughter and six sons survive. Three of the sons, George, James and Clyde, are residents of Altoona. ~By the recent death of Wilson Todd, son of Lemuel Todd, the Sara A. of his share of his mother’s estate, which was, as stated in the will, “one-half of the residue of the estate.” The estate amounted to nearly $500,000. After all the other bequests are subtracted and costs and expenses paid, it is ex- pected that the estate will net $300,000, of which Wilson Todd possessed one-half and the Memori- al home one-half. By his death the home comes into possession of both parts, or $300,000.