—A boom is being started for Vice President SHERMAN for President. A sort of Ta-ra-ra boom. —Chop suey, a la Nittany, was the dish de resistance, at State College boarding houses during commencement. —Right you are, Mr. SPRINGER, of Den- ver, Colorado, when you say: “If my wife has sinned she must atone for it herself.” —Don't worry about how hot it is around here. Just think of Yuma, Arizo- _VOL. 56. Basis for Democratic Harmony. i na. It was 110 degrees in the shade The unanimity of the Democrats of | Pennsylvania in favor of tise nomination STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. JUNE 16, 1911. i Plaint of the Keystoners. The Senate in Washington, on Monday | The Keystoners and near-Keystoners, | Bryan and Underwood. From the San Francisco Star. Of course Mr. Bryan is right in his de- there on Sunday. of Governor WooDROW WILSON for Presi- | constitution so as to permit the election last, adopted the resolution to amend the | who still lai to be Democrats are great. | —Judged from the deluges we have had the past week or so it would look as though the attention of a physician were needed for nature's water works. —If those show girls continue shooting up New York there may have to be a re- opening of that famous Brownsville, Tex- as, episode to give them a chance to prove an alibi. —The shad season has just closed and is said to have been a failure. The price we had to pay for them here wouldn't in- dent ought to bring about a complete rec- | of Senators in Congress by the direct | will not promise to veto the TUSTIN pe | ninety onciliation of difference upon less im- | vote of the people as Governors and oth- | mary election law. They imagine that portant questions. Some weeks ago the er State officers are now chosen. The under the old law they could exercise a Democratic City committee of Philadel resolution had previously passed the potent influence in making the nomina- | phia adopted unanimously a resolution, | House of Representatives, but as it was tions of all the parties. Not greatly | offered by Mr. CHARLES P. DONNELLY, amended in the Senate will have to go moved by considerations of principle : declaring its fidelity to the Jersey political | back to the House for concurrence in the could ask for the Republican primary WARWICK. Recently chairman DEWALT, | amendment. In the event that the House ; ballots in one section, Democratic ballots , of the Democratic State Central commit- | concurs in the amendment to the resolu- in another and Keystone bellots where tee, has expressed himself in plain terms | tion the proposed amendment to the con- | neither of the others would better serve as favoring Governor WILSON. Most of stitution will then be submitted to the their purpose. In tact the near-Keyston- | of profit on the wool the so-called Democratic insurgents, in Legislatures of the several States for rati- ers who still claim to be Democrats are other words the “re-organizers,” are os- fication. If it successfully runs that already striving to get control of the dicate that it had been a financial failure, however few were caught. Lo the loss | PO0Y i8 for him steps should be taken to —New Yorkers are bewailing the 108s | 0 ihe friendship effective. of their Dreamland by fire last week. gq ooo 200 the WATCHMAN called at- | Just as if Philadelphia, the oldest and years ago | most consistent dreamland on earth | wo con on political questions and sug- | wasn't within 90 miles of them. | gested his availability for the Democratic | —Common decency should compel New | nomination in 1908. Several times since York to properly appreciate the fact that | then and before his nomination and elec- Philadelphia did actually waken up long | tion to the office of Governor of New enough to put one over on a New Yorker | Jersey we felt constrained to refer to to the amount of ten thousand bucks. | him as a type of the citizenship in which —The determination of Senator DE- the hopes of the Democratic party and WALT to resign the chairmanship of the | the country rested. He was not in poli- State ccmmittee will be a little tough on : tics at the time butas president of Prince- the political athletes of the re-organizers ! ton University his utterances were so’ crowd. When he goes they lose their | completely in line with the best traditions principal punching-bag. | of the Democratic party and the highest —That Mexican turmoil that is thought | achievements of the governmentof the to be about over may not amount to United States, that we felt that he should much in other ways to the Mexican peo- | be considered among the most favored of ple, but it will, at least, give its women the Democratic statesmen. rtunity to pose as “Daughters | _ Among the first public utterances of JU 1b GPortY NS oe 8 Governor WILSON that attracted our at- | The co tions of ‘two Polish | tention was a statement made in a public | Te congress : | address to the effect that more would be ! Sunes mn Seration 80 bite 3 sua | accomplished, in the way of trust-busting, | Sunday and iwo wome | by the conviction in the criminal court! had their heads cut open by flying stones. | =. proper punishment of one of the | Surely the progressives aye turning their | trust magnates, than in a hundred in- attention from politics to religion. stances in which the offending a —Governor ‘TENER'S new automobile | tion was fined. We remembered at the | having been hauled up for “scorching” | time that Judge HARMON, of Ohio, had through Abington it is not unnatural to | previously expressed the same idea, but assume that the Governor has been en- jt was none the less true because it had joying the liberty given him since the been said before. Declaiming against Boss has taken his eyes off Harrisburg. | iniquity compasses no cure of the evil or Tha n Pennsylvania. for | redress of the wrong. But acting on the the past year, exceeded the number of | lines indicated by Governor WILSON deaths by 99,865 and so far we have seen | meant remedy. Therefore we felt that he no claim on the part of our Keystone Was in line for Democratic consideration ' friends that their organization should be and are glad so many others are coming credited with this blessed result. Strange, | to that opinion. isn't it? ; : —Between the cold, deep snows and elt isreasonably certain that Roose- ‘ icy pavements of winter. and the heat | VELT will support TAFT for re-election be- od thunder sis ¢ ‘ cause he knows that with the steam roller and unexpected thunder showers of sum- |, 4 working order he couldn't defeat mer, the a Ioying toe 3 gd 10] the present occupant of the White House. stay away from church really Nas mOre | p,.. ii can hardly be said that the “Coinel” blessings to be thankful for than he ac- knowledges. —It looks now as if the re-organizers may be able to organize the much abused | ‘but ever hopeful Democracy of the State | into two parties. This will fill the ex. The Hon. CHAUNCEY DEPEW, happily and for life a private citizen, is greatly pectation and purpose its promoters set | 9"" : 1 i out to accomplish—make places for them- | delighted because Judge GARY, chairman : will enjoy himself while he is supporting | his successor in office. Depew’s Mistaken Notion. tensibly, at least, for WILSON, and if every- | gauntlet a policy which has been con- | Democratic organization without declar- and becomes baggy and tending for many years will be inaugurat- | ing their divorce from the Keystone party. ed | There are some features in the TUSTIN . l We have never shared in the enthusi- | bill which ought to have been left out. For number of Registrars in cities of the first and second classes is a palpable injus- | no objection to it at all and in deference ! tice to the Democrats. The pretense was to the overwhelming public sentimentin i set up that this alteration was made in its favor would have welcomed the adop- | the interest of economy. That is simply tion of the resolution as it originally pass- ed the House. But the Senate amend- ment provides for absolute congressional control of elections at which Senators are to be chosen and it seems to us introduc- es into our electoral system a very grave danger. The conduct of elections is purely a State affair. The government at Washington has no right to interfere in such local matters and vesting such power in Congress may work infinite mischief. We have never been able to see, either, how this change in the method of elect- ing Senators in Congress will work the great moral improvement that is expect- ed of it. The party machine usually con- trols the election under existing condi- tions through the Legislative caucus but under the proposed system the party ma- chine will exercise the same power through the nominating machinery. In sire for this change in the method of | electing Senators in Congress. We have | at the expense of fair and just elections | is too expensive to be calmly considered. The decrease in the number of Registrars | is likely to have this effect. With two of | | each party on the board the opportunities ' for fraud were minimized and the law should have been left in that way. But there is nothing lost by limiting the selection of Registrars in all cities to the two old parties. The Keystone party is not only a local but a transcient or- ganization and has no right to claim to be a party or policy in the sense that is contemplated not only in that law but in all other laws bearing on the question. If those Democrats who had much to do with swelling the Keystone vote last fall to the proportions which have swelled the heads of certain leaders are successful in seizing the Democratic organization, the | short wool Oth or five months, while the woolen clothes, which the tariff on raw material preven turing here, wear for years without be- tention to the utterances of WOODROW : asm of some of our friends in their de- | example, the provision decreasing the coming unshapely. 3 Of course, we realize that Mr. Under- wood is in rather a delicate position in the matter, because the t steel and ests of his State (Alabama) require of sheep maintain the protective ; but should realize that it is better for a pro- Sectionist 0 Yindicats his by staying a e as a Repu than to cule © Dou support Mr. U 's retort, that Mr. Bry- an voted for the Wilson bill containing the same wool schedule which he pre- sents, is a non- ‘ the Wilson bil on. ; all Democra filibuster, voted for is to be all Democrats will vote for the U bill, on its final pas. sage, y they may, in it will be well for some of our leading Democrats to remember that Mr. Bryan has a right to be heard, even in criticism of the august “ways and committee;” and also that leaders who seriously disagree with Mr. Bryan's well-known views on the tariff question are likely to find themselves four staple ts us from manufac this State, for example, the fact that Gov- ernors are elected by the direct vote of the people has not guaranteed the high- est standard of statesmanship and moral- ity in that office. If the election of Gov- Keystone party will dwindle to the strength | without support or following in the fu- of the Republican force opposed to Pen. ture. ROSE and the few Democrats who can’t come back. It is therefore not worthy Rough Rider vs. Mutual Friend. i From the the Pittsburg Post. is needed if he were not as bad as the | selves to pose as leaders. —No matter what the temperature may be the rest of the summer people about Harrisburg feel confident of a cool spell on the 18th and 19sh of July. Those are the days that our frigid friend, Mr. GEORGE W. GUTHRIE, expects to spend in that city trying to organize his re-organi- zers. —Mrs. CARRIE NATION, the Kansas sa- loon smasher, has left an estate valued of the Steel trust board, “got the bulge” on the Congressional committee investi- gating that atrocious conspiracy. Just as he was sailing on his annual trip to Europe, the other day, Mr. DEPEW took the country into his confidence. Speak- ing on the subject he said: “They start- | ed in with the idea that they, the Demo- | crats, were going to get after the Steel | corporation and have plenty of campaign | | material to use next year. Instead GARY | { has gone further than they dared go.” -and all other contemplated legislation | ty than any election that has taken place must go to that committee. The Far- for years. of consideration. ernor had been by the Legislature the! _ machine would hardly have had things -——We are indebted to a Philadelphia easier. i contemporary for the information that | "apprehensions in New York city of al —Senator LORIMER, of Illinois, con- | tinues to exercise his senatorial preroga- But nobody has given any reasons why | tives whenever his vote is needed to ful- | there ever should have been apprehen- fill the purposes of the machine. But it | sions in New York city at any time on will not be long until he will cease to thus | that score. As we understand it water is offend the principles of decency. A man | used there only for bathing feet and the whose title to a seat in the Senate is as | average New Yorker can postpone that dubious as that of LORIMER would decline | form of ablution for a month or two in to vote on questions upon which his vote | the event of a scarcity of water. Voters of the County to worst reports make him. 2 Remember. | For Democratic | The WATCHMAN would remind the That no legislation other than the Ca- | Democratic voters of the county that at nadian reciprocity agreement will be en- | the coming fall election they will have a acted during the present session of Con. | ful] county as well as complete township gress is already obvious. Senator PEN- and borough ticket in every district of ROSE, chairman of the Senate committee | this county, to elect. In fact the election on Finance, has already announced that | of November next will be of more im- Work of Congress Revealed. the work of that committee is finished | portance to them, as citizens of the coun- | mers’ Free List bill and the measure to reduce the tariff taxes on wool and wool- ens, will go over to the next session. The | fights and factions that divide and dis- | Harvester trust and Wool trusts wiil get | tract the party in other sections of the nearly another year of good stealing |State—and that too at a time when therefore. This will give them a vast ad- | there is no State campaign on and a most To win we must be united. Any effort to drag into the party the at $10,000. The passing of CARRIE ends | Unquestionably that is true. He has per- | vantage. It ought to be good for ample important county campaign confronts ' the career of one of the world’s most unique characters. The fruits of her sa- loon smashing pilgrimages were practic- ing turther in the Steel trust investiga- | ginning and suggested that such legisla- | ally nil, but she was at least consistent to | tion than campaign material. To the, tion as the Farmers’ Free List bill and | hereafter. the point of fanaticism. —So far “re-organization” tre county Democrats think they are just about as able to make and manage their " jured himself like a pirate. i Of course Mr. DEPEW could see noth- | echo of the jokes and gibes of other trade and the regulation of prices has i been and is being violated every day by | funds for the next campaign. | us—is calculated only to divide, distract We predicted this result from the be- and defeat the party in the county. Divisions now are sure to bring defeat the wool measure be put through and up| He who insists in creating dissensions | has not | clowns, his feeble mind is limited in its to the President in advance of the Cana-! gnq fomenting trouble now, under the proven a raging success hereabouts. Cen. ‘ange. The law forbidding restraint of dian pact. If that had been done the plea of changing conditions elsewhere in | President would have been : confronted | the State, is only working to bring dis- with the alternatives of helping to pass | aster to the Democracy of the county. own organization as a lot of disgruntled that concern. An act of Congress had the other measures or lose the one for | Keep this in mind, Democrats. | From the Pittsburg Sun. Philadelphia, Pittsburg and Harrisburg been literally abrogated in order that it | which he had become the sponser. In| The country was startled a ( ago the statementof a “m 5 that Mr. Roosevelt throwing aside all per- sonal considerations, was going to re- move his coat and jump into the thickest candid of President Taft. But the story had hardly rolled off the wires be- was a base and unscrupulous fabricator | —that Mr. Rooseveit didn’t intend to do anything of the sort. Of course it was | not intended to convey the impression that the former cocupant of the White | House was opposed to the present ten- | ! ant, but rather to show that the would ! | be friend was describing conditions as he | would like to have them. Following this denial there arose con- | ' siderable comment as to whether or not the third term bee was buzzing in the ex- | presidential bonnet, but perish the thought! Along comes the roughest kind of a rough rider, one of the heroes who rode up San Juan hill, and says that Colonel Roosevelt “told him personally” | that under no consideration would he be a candidate, that he would consider a : movement of that kind “2 calamity” and ‘wanted his friends to do everything in ' their power to prevent such a nomina- ‘ tion being tendered. Now if there is any one class of special- ists competent to talk on this subject it . is those who come from the ranks of the ‘rough riders. Consequently, with the same promptness that nipped the mutual friend story in the bed, comes the decla- ration from Oyster Bay that the man who wore the khaki in the faid at Santi- ago tells the truth, word for word. Itis possible for a mutual friend to lie, but a So there you have it. Mr, Rossevelt is not in the race either for himself or any- | rough rider, never! * body else. But it is possible that some- body else will come along in a day or two with a modification of both stories. There is always a chance to be mistaken, All in a Glance. Galloping through the news of the day SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. Work has been started on the gigantic tipples for the Rochester and Pittsburg Coal and Iron company at Lucerne. ~The Pennsylvania Fire Brick Company start- ed drilling last week for fire clay on the lands recently noted in our columns as having been leased on Black Bear run. —Something is killing the fish in the Susque- hanna, near Towanda. The victims are chiefly suckers and the disease makes itself manifest by a bright red spot on the tail. —Mrs. Joseph Klegnaz, of Bath, quarreled with her husband at the supper table and ended the matter by stabbing him with a fork. The man isdead and the woman in prison. ~Many thefts and one holdup that occurred in Hazelton and nearby towns in the last eighteen months have been traced to a crowd of boys through the arrest of two for entering a ware- —Dealers in the Pocono mountains expect to begin the shipment of huckleberries to the big markets about the first week in July. The crop is said to be very promising, despite a number of forest fires. ~The annual reunion of the Pennsylvania Canal Boatmen's association will be held at Blairsville on September 13. This was decided at a meeting of the executive committee, held re- cently at Johnstown. —The town of Hastings has decided to put down a sewage system as the result of the fever epidemic that struck the town last year. Altoona contractors have been asked to bid on the work, which is to be started and completed during the summer. ~The Juniata Valley Campmeeting association has let a contract for the erection of a new taber- nacle on the grounds at Newton Hamilton. It will be 50x70 feet, and work on its erection isto start at once. Other improvements will be made to the grounds. —The inadequate fishway at the McCall's Ferry dam, on the Susquehanna, will probably lead to the annihilation of the shad frequenting the Pennsylvania river. The fish were unable to get over the obstruction and many of them were caught by hand. —Dr. M. H. Spare, of Allentown, after fixing a strange customer's teeth, was handed a $10 bill in payment. Not having the change, he ran to the corner grocery. When he returned the stranger was gone with several hundred dollars worth of dental instruments and gold leaf. —Buried in the yard of a house at Pittsburg rented by Howard E. Hall, of Columbus, O., de- tectives found silk dresses, stockings and other wearing apparel to the value of $1,000, in addi- tion to $10,000 worth of clothing and jewelry found when the house was searched. —The new western penitentiary will probably be established on one of the forest reserves of the State and so constructed as to permit of additions from timeto time. It is the idea of Governor Tener to concentrate the whole of the State's criminal population in one big institution. —E. J. Byers, of York, came near dying because physicians and nurses connected with the York hospital overlooked a piece of rubber hose a foot long that had been placed in his left side after an operation for an abcess of the lung fifteen months ago. His family physician discovered and re- moved it. ~—Among improvements at the Newton Hamil- ton/fdmp ground, the directors have ordered concrete tops placed on top of the three wells. The order was also given to clean out and wall up with concrete the spring across the ravine, ! from which the water will be pumped into the tank for use of tenters. —There was a sand slide ata quarry near | Burnham a few days ago that resulted in one ! death and the narrow escapeoffive others. Ed Gross, aged 14 vears, who was watching the men work, ran the wrong way when the slide came and was buried under six feet of earth. It was an hour before his body could be uucovered. water famine have not been allayed.” of the fray in an effort to advance the| —The upper watersof the Susquehanna are to get the benefit of some fish planting by the State of New York. The New York State hatchery has | fore the Sage of Oyster Bay was out with | placed 3,000,000 yellow bass in the Chemung river, | a mild intimation that the “mutual friend" | between Waverly and Chemung. This is the largest number of fish ever placed in the streams of that secticn. The work of distributing was dond by State Fish Commissioner William Farley. —Owing to the fact that the Huntingdon bank proved to be a part of the estate of the late C. H. Glazier, of Huntingdon, it was closed on Monday morning, pending the settlement of the estate. The action was taken on the finding of a contract in which he had bound himself to take over the bank. Attorneys are responsible for the state- ment that depositors will receive dollar for dollar when the estate is finally settled. —After a stormy session, in which citizens at. tempted to take a hand, the Johnstown school | board elected Miss Gertrude Wray high school ! principal. The vote was 11 to 10. The failure of , the board to re-elect Professor A. E. Kraybill | was charged to politics. Miss Wray has been at | the head of the English department for a number of years. She is well known in Blair county, as "her home is at Bellwood, and, as it is stated that ‘the fight is not over vet, the outcome will be ! awaited with interest. { ==On July 1the salaries of 150 post-masters in | Pennsylvania will be increased by from $100 to | $300 a year because of the increase in the receipts , of their offices in the last six months. At the same time the salaries of 41 postmasters in the State will drop from $100 to $200 because the re- ceipts have fallen off. Five offices will be re- | duced from the presidential to the fourth class. | Among the latter are Cross Forks and Driftwood. | The postmaster of Northumberland will get an increase of $200, while the office at Sunbury is included in the reduction list. —Jacob Fenstemacher, of Harrisburg, who has just celebrated his 94th birthday, has had a re- markable career. He retains all of his faculties, reads the newspapers every day, is an ardent ! fisherman, and up until a short time ago worked a little garden. He is a cabinet maker and spent nearly fifty years of his life working at that trade might obtain 4 monopoly of the ore sup- that event he would have used the pat-! _ The United States Senate has final- : we their thinking machines are PY of the country and stifle competition ronage of the government to get votes |y agreed to reduce expenses and in pur- ir lin all branches of steel manufacture. | for all three of the bills instead of limit- I toll a | | The investigation is for the purpose of ing his pernicious activities to the sup-| ! politicians are to do it for them. And in New Bloomsburg. During the Civil War he was forced to remain idle because he was too old to enlist in the army. He was for a number of years an officer in the State militia, having been appointed to that position by Governor Bit- m G ’s icy mountains to India’s coral strand, the discriminating eye would fain linger only on the paramount. Sc, as somebody says, if we are going to be —Commencements are over and many ' correcting these dangerous abuses, but port of the Canadian bill. He is an ex- a boy with a twenty-five dollar vision will | vy Depew couldn't see that. As it re- pert in the use of patronage to compass hang around the parental roof until old | 4. ireq mental vision what would he see legislation and might as easily have had Col. Sense gets it pounded into his head | with? | the three bills as one. that he isn't worth more than eight. | aq, paper of fact, however, Judge Of course the delay in effecting these Then he will start to work and if he has | Gary didn't “get the bulge” on the Con- | reforms in tariff legislation will cost the good red blood in his veins to make his gressional committee. He made all sorts | peole of the country immensely. Anoth- college education count he'll jump so fast | of hypocritical pretenses of virtue in the | er winter of cotton and shoddy clothing that he'll have nothing to fear for the fu- .,nquct of the conspiracy he directs but ' for children of the poor will multiply the ture. | fooled nobody except such imbeciles as number of tuberculosis sufferers through- —What in the world do some people | DEPEW. If he means what he says he is | out the country. It will put hundreds of expect the Democrats of Pennsylvania to | a Socialist and if he doesn't mean it he thousands of dollars, literally stolen from : : ! mount, let us be ount. Mt. | antiquated officials who were originally | Etna rumbles and Italy aay China | appointed at the instance of gentlemen no : demands $6,000,000 from Mexico at the | longer members of the body. The entire | cannon’s mouth for tk~ killing of 300 saving promised by this heroic operation | Chinamen in Torreon; the congrssiona | is about $30,000, which is a trifle com- | rice-fixing at Gary dinners; New York | pared with the decrease in the expenses! Pre, shooting scandal in high life and ‘of the House made by the Democratic | low life; West Point may have nobody to ‘majority voluntarily. A real pruning in haze if the enrollment continues falling | the Senate would result in a saving of | j off; the Mercer county stra of i Pennsylvania has arrived, and a steel i more than $100,000 annually but we trust director sneers “Pittsburgh isa has- won't get that until the political com- : been.” : plexion of the body has been changed. ES en ao ——The Finance committee of the ~——THEODORE ROOSEVELT and J. PIER- United States Senate was equally divided stand for? Here they are again handing | is a fraud. In either event he is un-|the people, into the treasuries of the out a fusion proposition to us that is all one sided. Those Keystoners are at Har- risburg offering to fuse, if the Democrats endorse Governor WILSON for President, and give the Keystoners the nominees for State Treasurer, Auditor General, Sen. ators and Members of the Legislature. Honestly did you ever hear of more im- pudence. i worthy of either confidence or respect! trusts, and that is mainly what the Re-| PONT MORGAN, are to be summoned as’ on the Canadian reciprocity agreement, a { and the fraudulent absorption of the Ten- publican organization is maintained for. witnesses in the Steel trust investigation, | motion to report it adversely having been nessee Coal and Iron company ought to | But on the other hand it will provide an | according to Washington dispatches. To | defeated by a vote of seven to seven. and likely will be declared invalid. Judge | abundant campaign fund to bribe voters | our mind, however, this will be a waste | Still the friends of the measure are confi- GARY would like to make the govern. | at the next presidential and congression- | of time. Mr. ROOSEVELT will never allow | dent that .t will pass the Senate by acon- ment a partner in this crime against the ' al election and may even accomplish the | Judge GARY to seem the more adroit in | siderable majority after the ROOT amend- { people, but he will not be able to accom- re-election of President TAFT. If it will weaving excuses for a violation of the ment has been eliminated. Let us hope | plish it. The Congressional committee is | do this the evil consequences will not flaw in which ROOSEVELT was the princi- | these expectations will not be disappoint- wise to him. | bother him. pal offender. ed. i ner. —A remarkable accident occurred on the Cam- bria & Clearfield division of the Pennsylvania railroad last Thursday afternoon when the pas- senger train which leaves Patton at3.15 was wrecked a mile south of that place, when the locomotive ran into two cows that had strayed upon the track. The rails were spread as the cows were struck and the locomotive was thrown on its side. the cars behind crashing into it with consid- erable force. The train was running thirty miles an hour at the time. A number of the passengers were badly shaken up, but none received injuries other than minor bruises. —Mpyers F. Deitrick, of Montandon, formerly of White Deer valley, died at the Williamasport hospital at 10.30 o'clock on Monday morning, of tetanus. About a week ago the unfortunate man ran a small splinter into his left foot. The wound was only a slight one and apparently soon healed. On Friday Deitrick complained to a brother, with whom he lived, of a stiff neck and sore throat. Dr. Hoffman, of Montandon, was called in and an examination disclosed to him that lockjaw had developed. Sunday he was taken to the Williams- port hospital, where he was given heroic treat- mer in an unsuccessful effort to save his life.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers