'Kidnapper Says He LAST GIRL COTTAGER Judge Archibald nS Enjoins Lumter Trust. | The old proverb in agriculture was| New Advertisments. Found Guilty e government's peti:icn {or a per Took Girl's Defi RIO ols father + | manent injunction against the Eastern . . TS IN SENTIMENT poor. That might be paraphrased SALE.—Four ice a Lalors” Su80titr edt to say the lack of lime makes the father JO% 0 hare iron erties and fre plates 1 Jurist Is Convicted of Five of the tion, alleged to be a combination in Samuel Sinclair Says He Loves Mis: Thirteen Articles of Impeachment| 0. de, was granted by the| Steckel and He Tried to Win Her In Against Him. federal district court in Washington. Romantic Manner. The final arguments for and against | sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh and twelfth. This removes him from office. Following the executive session, Senator O'Gorman offered his resolu tion in this form: Columbia and others. Accordingly, he says, he boldly fol The government's petition, filed in lowed her into her home, carried her 1911, alleged that the defendants were to a taxicab and gave orders to tae engaged in a conspiracy in restraint chauffeur to drive into the country. of interstate trade, operated through The driver was frightened by the girl's the instrumentality of black lists, fines screams and drove to the police sta-| “Guilty” on five of the thirteen ar statement, we are having the time of our lives. ticles of impeachment against him $16 Hj enetion Wels heard a few weeks| _ AcCoF i Dy NY 1e| “They stand silent in the October New Advertise ments. we cd lo sid estate’ to make was the verdict of the United States} “up, jorendants also include the New Steckel, of Allentown, Pa. in cave sunshine. But it is a silence of a aif- R - | Be Dee them duly authenticated for set- senate in the case of Judge Robert W. i ferent quality from that of the sum- SALE OR RENT~The tlement, York Lumber Trade association, the' man fashion at the practical sugges in township, DR. JOHN 1. ROBINSO! Archbald, of the commerce court, who ’ mer—it i breathless, eager, That is acres and 260 acres in timber . N. Adminstrator. Building Material Men's association, tion of the young heiress herself. strange, since what they waiting Good buildings: Sod We W. Hannison WALKER. 1108 Woodlawn St, was charged with misuse of his POWET| yng New Jersey Lumber Men's Protec. | He asserted that the girl had toll} oon, > are Also the Cam Waicy; Whe SAC Cloral. WB" Aor. Scranton, Pa. as a judge to his personal gain. He awociation, the Retall Lumber.| him she would never MAT} o man | oF desolation Loa fau~the Be touch Baden Mas. W. H. BARON. | /\ PMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. — Letters of The judge was convicted on the first, | peng aggociation, the Retall Lumber. Without sufficient spunk to take her iu gt Bost ad whis B o Winds. 58.346 * I Foaming. Pa. administration on the estate of John A. third, fourth, fifth and thirteenth men's Ass iation of Baltimore, the spite of herself and do it in a roman a gol quality very ny se Ts ot Patton towhabip, charges and acquitted on the second.| yumper Exchange of the District of tic manner. air, the reflection of the yellow of the Letters gamed to the undersign i “Ordered: that the respondent, Rob- ert W. Archbald, judge of the third judicial court and designated to sit in the commerce court, be removed from office and be disqualified from holding and enjoying any office of honor, trust or profit under the United States.” On motion of Senator Oliver, of Pennsylvania, the question was divid- ed. The first half, removing Judge Archbald from the bench, was unani- mously adopted, and the adoption of the second part disqualifying Arch- bald from holding any office followed by a vote of 39 to 35. The conviction on the first count, which charged that Archbald had used his position as a judge to persuade the Erie Railroad company to give to him and E. J. Williams, of Scranton, Pa., an option on a coal dump at a price probably $80,000 less than its real value, came with an unexpec.e:! majority against Judge Archbald, only two-thirds being necessary for a con viction. On this the first, and thus the cru and expulsion from membership, and! tion, thus terminating the plan of the that by trade agreements they arbi! : | Samuel Sinclair and R. Walter Starr | are now out on $3000 bail each, on a ed that the defendants be perpetually trarily fixed prices. The government fncluded itself as a consumer and ask- enjoined from making any contract or combination in furthermore of their conspiracy. By this decision this is granted. Titanic Survivors Ask $10,000,000. Fifty lawyers who hope to obtain for their clients more than $10,000,000 in damages for loss of life and property on the steamship Titanic were arrayed against attorneys for the White Star line in the United States district court in New York at the expiration of the time limit set by the court for bringing suits. The limit was extended to Feb. 1. The White Star line contends that its entire liability is limited under the United States statutes to less than $100,000—the value of recovered wreckage and passage money. American claimants allege that the love-crazed young clubman. charge of attempted kidnapping. Sinclair made a statement regard:nz the girl. He declared: “I loved the girl,” said Sinclair, “aud 1 still love her. 1 made up my mind that some day I was going to have her, but when | proposed to her some months ago she told me that she wouid pever marry a man who could no. take her. She told me that he musi do it in a romantic manner, and I de termined to do it. “] am sorry that I got R. Walter Starr, my nephew, into this. The boy was innocent. He entered the plan with me simply for a lark, and I sin cerely hope he does not get into trou ble over it.” . Miss Steckel, who is the daughter of | Reuben P. Steckel, millionaire retired | business man, bears a slight cut on her | forehead, and her face is scratched | from the struggle in the taxicab with | a great conflagration running close to the ground. It is the dwarf sumach, which is a veritable living flame. The goldenrod is all rusty and the wild asters have vanished. The ground is half covered by a patterned carpet from the trees above. Slashing through this riot of tones is something that glitters with an uncanny, rippling prilliance in the soft, steady rays of the sun—it is the inland lake, which was commonplace enough when just blue or gray in the summer. is a sheet of quicksilver pricked by diamond points, “All through the woods is a rustling and scurrying and chattering, for the squirrels are getting ready for: winter and making a great uproar about it. Max, the collie, passes his days in hysterical chases, covering the ground in the splendid, long leaps that only a collle can manage, but always the little red-brown squirrel flashes up a of t Bellefonte, Pa., on Monday, 27th, Bellefonte, Pa., op Monday. January 20. bre tor ensuing such Bellefunte, Pa. January 9th, 1913. UTOR'S NOTICE.— In the estate of Anna Patton Burkett, late of Halfmoon township, deceased. Letters in the above named estate; having been granted to the undersigned, all persons to said estate, are requested to make t and those having claims or demands against said Re having d lo make izmmedigts payment Now it to . tary on the estate of James ¢. Glililand OTICE. ~The an meeting of the stock- ” 1 s Bolero he B = rectors for having claims against the to transact other busi- duly authenticated for settlement. come before such meeting. | year and DMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE. —Letters of administration on the estate of Henry M. Krebs, late of F. n oh ! de- ) been grant t indebted to testament- indebted all persons ms a said estate to estate uested t estate ate Ju i i so present the same. duly | present the same duly aut ated for settle a % Mio CAMPBELL, Executor, XE AREBS, ORTNEY & FORTNEY; W. A. RMAN, Attorneys. | 57496t Penna Furnace, Pa, GETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY, 3 FACED Attorneys. 5; D! TORS’ NOTICE—Estate Ee EEE A A Rhoads, Joe of the borough of Bellefonte, deceased, | Hardware. estate having been to the having been ranted! Centre county, Fa. | estate are HARDWARE cial count on the indictment on which cannot claim this limitation the two men. Chief of Police Bernar. | tree just in the nick of time and barks . RHO, the judge had been on trial since Dec. Moe it - itselt OS a De says that her clothes were torn when staccato defiance in answer to the REL NRHOAD Qu li C t 2, the vote was 68 to §, for conviction | jogg of life by reason of personal negli- She was brought into the station house dog's yells of disgust and defeat be- Bellefonte, Pa. a 1ty ounts. of “high crimes and misdemeanors’ | gence. If thelr assertion in this re- with the men who tried to abduet her. | low. Max has been known to dash — —— The five senators who voted for ac-| gpect is sustained, the claimants will Miss Steckel, suffering from shock wildly into the bungalow and drag H TO eos Jug quittal were Burnham, of New Hamp | recover full damages. as the result of her brief but exciting 8n¥ handy human being to the tree 0 of the Court of Common Pleas of the Dockash Ranges shire; Catron, of New Mexico; Oliver But even if this claim is not upheld, ride in the taxicab, was visited by a! where some particularly exasperating a of the coun of Atlas Portland Cement Crown Wall Plaster Beaver Board Buckeye Fence Hippo-Hide Roofing Cotton Beltings Leather Beltings Galvanized Roofing Everything in Hardware. and Penrose, of Pennsylvania, and Paynter, of Kentucky, the latter being the only Democrat. the contention of A. L. Brougham, rep- resenting two hundred claimants, is that the White Star line's liability can be limited only by the provisions of the British law, which would compel the company to pay total damages of about $3,000,000. Mr. Brougham has instituted an ap- peal in the court of appeals, where he hopes to determine fully the rights of the death claimants to bring suit for full damages. Because of this appeal the lower court granted the postpone- ment. Centre, his host of her friends and acquaintance’. squirrel was safely ensconced and de- the 21st day of December. | 12, to me directed for and received numerous telephone aud mand excitedly that his friend get the holding 3 it of Com Ry tea, telegram messabes of congratulation | villain down and deliver him over for Over and Terminer and General Jail Delivery, in on her escape. Her condition is nu: punishment. If you speak collle Eng: Eelicioute, lor the county of Centre, and to com- considered serious. lish you can readily understand Max. FOURTH MOND ih AY OF FEBRUARY, Members of the family, especially The squirrels are tolerably tame. being the 24th day of February, 1913, and to con- her father, are enraged at the attemp: | They will sit within armthrow tinue two ven toithe Yolk to abduct her and have determined t-| of you Coroner, Justices Work of Carnegie Hero Commissior. { § At the ninth annual meeting of the Carnegie hero fund commission in Pittsburgh, Pa. President Charles L. Taylor's report showed 1956 new caseg were submitted in 1912, an increase of 4 per cent over 1911. Two gold, forty-five silver and 108 bronze medals were awarded. During the year $169,025 was award ed to heroes; $25,000 for disasters and $100,000 in special appropriations. The commission since it was establishe! wezks, NOTICE is he on a branch and eat ofthe A a2 Constables of said Peace, A prosecute as far as the law will per | ff you are quiet. Once I saw county of Centre, that they be then and there in mit. one clamber up a hemlock with a their proper persong at 10 o clock in he forenoon Sinclair met Miss Steckel at a card | mushroom that must have weighed a inations and their own remembrances, to o those party and became immediately enam | pound, and, sitting up on his haunches, ns re who are bound 4 Djertaiie 16 be done ored of her. After that he was a fre | deliberately eat it to the last shred, ecute ra that are of shall be in quent visitor to the Steckel home. | winking deflance when I insisted that the Jolt amy: ies Heh Some time ago, according to intl | it was a toadstool. There was no dead Given 14th OLEWINE’S e, the mate friends of the young social fa squirrel under that tree next day, 80 day of January, i the yer of our Lord 1913, and Hardware Store, Hatpin Kills Prize Dog. The cause of the strange illness of Mrs. W. K. Roberts’ prize Boston bull -sixth of the In- vorite, she became tired of his per | he must have won the bet. dependence of the United States of America. In sistent attentions and proposals O'| “The air is full of wings. The blue- ARTHUR B. LEE. has awarded: For heries, $645,208.90; disaster, $174,462.06; special appropriations, $200,000, a grand total of $1,019,668.96. Pensions on Dec. 31, 1907, amounted to $840. This has increased to $58,380. The money goes to 82 widows, 170 de- pendent children and 14 other depeni- ents of deceased heroes. Bigthy-two education awards have been mace. Theer are twenty-four students in teca- nical schools at the expense of tie commission. Three are in art schools and tweive in academies and high schools. Ten have completed the: courses; eleven have discontinued their studies, and twenty-two are not yet eligible to attend schools. The officers of last year were re elected. ——————————————— dog Weary in Atlantic City, N. J., was a hatpin nine inches long in the poor dog's stomach. The discovery was made by Dr. Westcott, who used the X-ray. Mrs. Roberts, with tears pouring down her cheeks, ordered the dog chloroformed when the physician said an operation would scarcely succeed. The dog was valued at $500 and was a prize winner of blue ribbon ancestry. “In God We Trust” Off Nickel. Secretary of the Treasury MacVeagh has approved the design of a new five cent plece by J. E. Frazer, of New York. It will be plainly severe, bearing the word “Liberty” and the date of coin age on one side, instead of a female marriage and asked him to cease hls visits. Sinclair refused to be deterred | by this. Neighbors say that when hi: | rings at the doorbell of the Steckel | home were unanswered he would sit! on the steps for hours at a time. i The girl was seized at the door of | her home by Sinclair and Starr. The! latter is Sinclair's nephew and is 2 son of Dr. Walter Starr, a widely | known dentist, of 117 South Seven | teenth street, Philadelphia. | Miss Steckel at first thought the men | were joking, but when she found that she was being forced to the taxicalr | standing at the curb she tried to, scream : her mouth to stifle her cries, and when she was placed in the car a blanket was thrown over her head. | One of the men put his hand over jays and crows and wrens and black- birds and woodpeckers are yet in’ evi- dence, though the robins are gone. The crows sweep and caw, the black- birds shrill and chatter and all the tree trunks resound to the woodpeck- ers’ tapping search for insects. A couple of infinitesimal wrens hopping about through the leaves will make & | lot of noise. And all day long this feathered army is closing in on one. “Where the sun is hottest on the yellow grass the crickets still chirp and the green katydids sing from bending stalks. The crickets creep into the bungalow on the logs for the fireplace and chirp from the corners of the room. “Some morning, when it is particu larly golden and still, on your throw- ing open the doors the world will be s office, Bellefonte, Pa, January 14th, 1913. "| 57-25tf BELLEFONTE, PA The First National Bank. hr omm——— NEW YEAR that finds you without some money in bank will not be for you the happy and prosperous year we wished you last week. Money does not make one happy, Liberty head. - Then the chauffeur, C. W. Sherer, of The ee Cents wil Bopsat West Bethlehem, was ordered to “drive instead laurel wreath an er as-fast as you can into the country.” | of all the birds on earth, all talking “V,"as st present. The coin will bear Sherer, by this time thoroughly | at once. Rushing out, you find a doze | the words “E Pluribus Unum,” but not frightened, instead of obeying orders, | en trees inky with blackbirds, gather | filled with a tremendous chatter of [© Falls Over Lighted Stove. birds—not of a few, but apparently Fire in a house at 1117 Lombard street, Wilmington, Del., caused by a sick woman, who fell over an oil stove, Stt. George's church in New York. Burleigh Maine Senator. Former Congressman Edwin C. Bur leigh was elected United States rena tor by the Maine legislature in joirt + convention. of woods, and the wildcats, half grown ones, attacked so suddenly that Myers had scarcely time to defend himself. He came out of the battle with his face scratched and bis clothes torn 10 shreds. which resulted in an explosion, did the motto “In God We Trust.” turned his car toward the center of | ing for their migration. For two or : I p Hide damage 10 the Propeny. Dut 19. Kills Wife and Himself. o police Sg E510 1 Specs > three days this din keeps up and oc | but the rieed of it eS one pe. ly burned the woman, who was . nter square he will . ta i yo Boardley, colored. She was burn. | _ With his service revolver, Bdward saw Policeman Boyle, and, attempting Sasle fonally the thousands with Tove 39 Let us start you in the good habit [of ed from head to foot and died later al Burke, a policeman of Newark, N. J, to stop his machine, drove it into the through the air like waves. Then of saving. the Delaware hospital. killed his wife and himself at their soldiers’ monument. a sudden they are gone. You did not | home in the presence of their two lit- Boyle went to the girl's assistance | gee them on their grand flight—nobody Slain In His Shop by Bandit. tle children. and arrested the two men. The chauf- | ger does catch them at it. They sim- Michael Mansfield, fifty-five years of It is sald that Burke was jealous be- feur says he was hired to attend a ply were and now are not, so far as age, was killed in his junk shop in| cause 2 other e nentione lus wedding and told to “obey orders.” you are concerned. | Th Fi . th Jeff street, Chicago, by| Wife. -year-o “Every eaves faster N al B Sh oteo Dre Po pm oo and three-year-old son Ormond were Startling Figures In Living Cost Probe. and the ar he aves drop Sante | ( rst ation ank, ber demanded that Mansfield turn over found sitting in thelr cribs crying over A ©0 St al investigation Into | oo upon The ground is speckled Bellefonte, Pa and the Intruder shot him. stand. United oo Pollo: 9 Ronsas, wd nuts and acorns. A sharper frost than ——————————— { House Upholds Taft's Postoffice Orders — : Van Vaisnburgh: of the Wem pEn Je Wal Vines (0 a ig | i ——————— CS —— The amendment to the postofiice ap-| Leaves $185,000 For York Library. | trict issouri, was asked for in & : propriation bill, annulling executive or-| _ Milton D. Martin, of York, Pa. who resolution presented to the house by SFuems 19 iroush He a | The Centre County Banking Company. ders placing assistant postmasters and | died possessed of an estate worth, | Representative Borland, of Missouri. a clerks of first and second class offices | $600,000, made a bequest of $185,000 It is alleged that the two judges ap- After the long stretch of quiet, and postmasters of the fourth class to the city of York for the erection pointed three reeivers for the Kansas shining, perfect days of Indian sum- under civil service, was rejected by and maintenance of a public library. Natural Gas company—a pipe line— mer you notice one evening as you the house, 141 to 106. This is the largest bequest ever made who were “friendly to the interests, | draw the curtaing and shut out the ve | Ora OTe Te vi amd th nied Gan Improvement con Rot the black tres nto th : is ded in , 's will Senator Gore, of Oklahoma, intro-| that a corporation chartered ge ou pany, of Philadelphia, which controll- | lake that the wind is rising. It comes Strength and Conservatism duced a bill in the senate adding tw" | citizens appointed by the court be ed it. fast and, hard and imperious. All night members to the United States suprem= | formed for the purpose of supervising A demand for an investigation, ac- | the acorns beat on the root like bul sourt. the erection and maintenance of a ii- companied by resolutions from the | lets and there is no wild scamper EE brary. This corporation will be known commen éougell of Langan Cty Mo, squistels ot raeseoli above JOE i Presents Electoral Vote. a sthe Martin Library association. gleses ia ne Joodivere Ge I Sed 008 | are the banking qualities demanded by careful Acting as a messenger for the presk a Marin Jatt $5000 » Liste aan Be ee * ma telous. pa at mp depositors. With of by dential electors of New Jersey, Fitz ; c epositors. forty banking ex- willam MoMuster Woodrow present: Walsh. & Soachintn, bo guve Slo greased ule {oF £48 sold Suroug the oo SBE morslag JO§ 0d 44 Jom +) . 2 > years ex: ed to resident of the senate i Harry e t becom i ingot er am | Ts, 3, I pe CE Rs | To very cout and stiention. ent ce president of . the Unie Slates. Woorow is 8 st | pojiroader Kills Two Wildcats. a. Ee hy Sanur of 0 Bo naked Se Jugal. Santon t at ceto rsity : » | : : {dent ut Princeton Suivervig inde Saaries A Myers, a dagen ou the auvointed J. N. Helskell,| brown leaves. There is an edge io We pay 3 per cent interest on savings and Booths Son a Bridegroom. cats with a club he was carrying. tle Rock, as United States senator to back indoors, for you know it is all | give you any information at our Chetles Brandon Booth, of Mon: Myers was, flagging the rear of his | succeed the late Jeff Davis. The ap-| over for another year. Winter is in. command : : ciate. N. 3. son of General Baliington jenn the Columbier& For Pues pointment is for the short term ending the barren air.” | concerning investments you may Booth, head of the Volunteers of Amer. | junia, Pa. hon attacked by the ani ary + desire to make. fea, and Miss Naomi Sutherland Bailey, | mals, Johvonrs Cafe BUI: Adopting the Idea. | of Lockport, N. Y., were married in| The train had stopped near a strip | Jack Johnson's automobile, a cafe fastidious pickpocket, caught The Centre County Banking Co. Bellefonte, Pa. es