gen posed on_former P suits of clothes to the tailors to have BY P. GRAY MEEK. SE SEs. | INK SLINGS. - —Up to this time Col. TAYLOR and his steam heating plant have been doing very nicely, thank you. —The fellow who doesn’t have a ther- mometer hanging around isn’t half so worried about the cold as the fellow who does. * —While the thermometer is playing hide and seek with zero in this neck 0’ the woods they are having a regular old fashioned THAW up in New Hampshire, . —The latest Parisian fad is to wear shoes without stockings; of course only the women affect it. Shades of Sockless JERRY SIMPSON rise to welcome the new style to Kansas! ‘ —If the mayor and council really un- dertake all the “clean-ups” in Bellefonte we hear they threaten, things will be so warm in some quarters that steam heat will be superfluous. - —The more ROLAND S. MORRIS tries to be chairman of the Democratic party in Pennsylvania the more evident it be- comes that he thinks the entire party is comprised in the little crowd of faction- ists he represents. ——The headquarters of the Congres- sional Committee of the National Suf- frage association have been moved from Washington to Chicago. Probably it was thought that it would be easier to “raise the wind” in the windy city. . ——The evidence that Representative MANN and other Republican leaders have been trying to organize a panic is multi- plying. There are few industrious peo- ple idle in any part of the country now and there is likely to be none at all in the near future. —What the Hon. WILLIAM MCNAIR, of Pittsburgh, has to say about the Hon. MitcH PALMER, of Stroudsburg, these days makes a noise like MITCH had kick- ed BILL out of that Reorganized bed. BILL was too good a chap ever to have crawled into it anyhow. . =—A Los Angeles dietician says that onions promote spirituality. If tears are indicative of spirituality then we are ready to admit that strong onions pro- mote.it. On the other hand, how many of you have eaten onions and - then seiz- ed that as an excuse for staying away from church or prayer meeting. *'—This thing of dropping from a $75, 000 a year job toa $5,000 professorship ‘Yale must be setting harder than was them taken in to conform to the eighty pounds loss of weight he has suffered lately. Were it not for the fact that he can still afford thirty-five suits we would be alarmed about his condition. —The Philadelphia Record is authori- ty for the statement that a mile of asphalt road, five yards wide, can be laid at a cost of $18,400. In Michigan they are laying concrete roads at $10,000 the mile. While both of these look better than our SPROUL roads at $21,000 we are still of the opinion that brick is the best and could be laid very cheap, especially in counties like Centre, where most of the roads have a good stone bottom. —And they say that some of the more progressive of the women who have been doing things around here for the past few years are quite angry with council in particular and men generally. The WATCHMAN doesn’t object to petticoat rule, so long as it is amiable and benefi- cent, but we want it understood, here and now, we don’t propose to see the men of Bellefonte hen pecked because they don’t roll over and jump through every time a petticoat cracks the whip. — The spring primaries are only a few months off and an important election is to be held in the State next fall. If Cen- tre county Democrats are to take an ag- gressive stand in the fight isn’t it about time they begin to prepare? Isn't it about time a chairman is selected for the county organization or is it to be put off until the last moment and then, if re- sults are not as they should be, those who are neglecting their duty now will be censuring the men in the ranks for their own short-comings. —In speaking of the Hon. JIM BLAKES- LIE'S bombastic blathering at the late Democratic dinner at Scranton Col. HAYES GRIER’S Columbia Independent re- marks that “hydrocephalous has caused the death of as many men as tuberculo- sis.” Hydrocephalous, you will recall, is a disease most common among infants and causes enormous enlargement of the head. In other words, Col. GRIER adds more testimony to the growing opinion that the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General has a decidedly swelled cranium. —~Congressman PATTON is getting in- to the political lime-light just now. Be- ing chairman of the Republican Congres- sional committee for Pennsylvania he has announced his opposition to the re-elec- tion of Senator PENROSE and has started a boom for Congressman AINEY, of Mon- trose. It is gratifying to have it recalled thusly to our attention that our District has a Congressman in Washington. We may be doing him an injustice, but we don’t recall having heard anything from him since he sent out that batch of seeds who tempted Cea ‘crown were reduced to the level of rank STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 59. We Were all Wrong—Jim Blakeslie was the Hero. An interesting incident as well as an important episode of the Baltimre con- vention, hitherto concealed, was brought out at a Democratic banquet in Scranton a few evenings ago. We had become familiar with the movements and achieve- ments of Hon. ‘A. MITCHELL PALMER dur- ing that memorable “party parliament,” and aware of the fact that President WILSON is indebted to the distinguished statesman from Stroudsburg, not only | for his nomination and election but for the wise policies he has pursued and the ' splendid success he has attained. We had been informed of the fact that when Mr. WILSON had telegraphed to his con. vention manager to withdraw his name, Mr. PALMER tore up the telegram and concealed from Mr. WILSON’S other friends his wishes, thus guaranteeing his subsequent nomination in spite of himself and his manager. - But we didn’t know, and blush at our want of perspicacity, that the real architect of President WIL- ' SON’S magnificent political fortune was, and is, the Hon. JAMES I. BLAKESLIE, now enjoying his ample reward as Fourth Assistant Postmaster General. But happily we are now enlightened and hasten to spread the joyous tidings broadcast among our friends and the public generally. At the banquet in question Mr. BLAKESLIE told of his work in a speech that was as thrilling as it was eloquent. He had been able to get only thirty-six hours sleep in nine nights at Baltimore, but the stress neither temper- ed his zeal nor dulled his enthusiasm. During one of the nine nights he retired to the apartments occupied by Mr. PAL- MER and himself at half-past three o'clock in the morning when Mr. PALMER told him that “three men from New York, .one from Indiana and one from Illinois had told him, (PALMER,) that they had the convention dead-locked against Mr. WiLsON ‘and offered the nomination to him, (Mr. PALMER.) There was certain- ly “a howdedo.” The three tailers of n Imperial pikers before these puissant shapers of ~detiny. And the Hon. “Jim” was the bosom friend of the Hon. “MITCH.” Here | was a test to try a Spartan. Did the Hon. JM quail! “Perish the thought.” According to the historian of the Scranton Democratic banquet he “went over to the table and took a drink of water and then went back and lit a cigarette.” It is not necessary to com- mend the self-coatrol and fortitude thus | revealed. He might have thrown the chiffonier out of the window or stood on After taking | his head. But he didn’t. the drink of water and lighting a cigarette he “sat thinking for five minutes.” What a commotion there must have been in | the atmosphere of that chamber during that period? Then his vocal organs got busy and he said: “MITCHELL, go back to that bunch of hyenas and tell them you’ll do it when you get the word from Sea Girt, and nof before. Tell them that we can dead-lock the convention as well as they can, and we can stay here till ‘ell freezes over, if necessary.” WILSON was at Sea Girt at the time awaiting the result of the ballotting. The alleged telegram asking that his name be withdrawn after CLARK had received a majority of the votes of the convention was sent from there, if sent at all, and PALMER had already read it. . In view of this new development, there- | fore, we withdraw the proposition to raise a cash fund to pay PALMER for his services in behalf of WILSON at the Balti- more convention. He has already been liberally rewarded for what he did. He has been trading in patronage like a huckster in a market stall for nearly ten months in consideration of his work and he didn’t perform the really great service , at all. His statement to BLAKESLIE would even imply that he was willing to sacrifice WILSON to further his own ambitions. BLAKESLIE was the great figure and he has his reward. But we insist on stop- ping the claims of PALMER. As we said before they are humiliating and demoral- izing. Democrats don’t pay personal debts with official patronage. ——The New Hampshire. commission having declared . that HARRY THAW is not insane it may be expected that he will soon be released to resume his place in the business life of the country. The only trouble is that the New Hampshire commission entered the case too late. It ought to have made its report when THAW was on trial for murder. ———Somebody ought to inject a little of the virus of frugality into the arm of the Hon. JosEpHUS DANIELS, Secretary of the Navy. Mr. DANIELS appears to be as liberal with other people’s money as a away last spring. spendthrift could be with his own. Mr. | The Sugar Trust Obdurate. The Sugar trust is incorrigible. It re- fuses to reorganize on the basis laid down by the government. The exam- ples set by the Money trust, the Tele- phone trust and the several other trusts which have gracefully, or otherwise, bowed to public sentiment and the force of the law, are lost upon this obdurate malefactor. It made terms with the ROOSEVELT administration, bamboozled the TAFT administration and imagines it can fool with the present authorities. , But it will find out, in the course of time, that it is sadly mistaken. Attor- ney General MACREYNOLDS will teach it the lesson it needs. He will not only dissolve the trust but he will put some of its arrogant officials in jail. | During the ROOSEVELT administration it was clearly shown that this conspiracy had been systematically robbing the gov- ernment by false weights and other pro- cesses for years. It was almost conclu- sively demonstrated that these frauds were practiced with the full knowledge and by the assistance of the officers of the trust. It is true that a few of the subordinate customs officials were con- victed and punished for their misfeas- ances but the high revenue officers and the officers of the trust were allowed to escape. They had rich or influential friends and ROOSEVELT has great consid- eration for rich men if they are friendly to him. A generous campaign contribu- tion has a wonderful influence on his mind. But President WILSON is built upon different lines. He has set out to com- pel all trusts to conform to the law and . will accept no compromise. The Sugar trust has opportunity to meet these con- ditions just as other trusts have done. If it fails the consequence is upon its own head. The law will work the result and it will inflict just punishment upon those responsible for the crimes that have been committed against the people. The negotiations for-an amicable settle- ment have been discontinued. The pro- cedings | ition, and pressed with vigor to the end. It is a fight of the people and for the people. Duty of a State Chairman. Democratic State chairman ROLAND S. MORRIS has been actively canvassing the State for the purpose of creating senti- ment in favor of Hon. A. MITCHELL PAL- MER as the Democratic candidate for Governor, according to our esteemed . Philadelphia contemporaries. Mr. PAL- | MER has not openly announced that he is a candidate for the nomination but his friends say that if the sentiment of his party is favorable, he is willing to enter the contest. This is an entirely fair at- titude for any aspirant to assume. A majority of the Democratic voters have ' a right to any candidate they want and | they will get him. But the Democratic State committee has no right to establish a propaganda for or against any candidate. The State committee is or should be, the organ of all the Democrats and it has no license to interfere in behalf of any man for the nomination. After the candidate is nom- inated it is the duty of the chairman of the State committee to manage the cam- | paign for his election and of the mem- bers of the committee to employ every { honorable means to compass that result. - The present State chairman and some of | the members of the committee seem to imagine, however, that the purpose of | the organization is to promote factions “and play favorites. : | _ During the recent campaign for Judges | of the Superior court chairman MORRIS | was asked to exert some effort to elect | the only Democrat on the ticket, but de- clined. He and the factionists with : whom he is associated favored another gentleman for the nomination and pre- sumably were not friendly to the admira- ble candidate who was nominated. But they are willing and anxious to engage in a factional fight for a nominee and further widen the breach in the party. Such action is rank recreancy and if Chairman MORRIS persists in it he should be removed from the office he disgraces. | Democrats throughout the State should | not permit such action on the part of the chairman. ——Naturally no building or outdoor ' work can be done atthe new penitentiary in Benner township this kind of weather, but thesixty-one prisoners there now are kept employed looking after the :tem- porary penitentiary buildings; the power, heat and light house and doing work at the various barns on the penitentiary farms. While nothing has so far been done on the erection of the main prison buildings, it is expected that considerable headway on these will be made next summer. | ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. BELLEFONTE, PA.. JANUARY 16, 1914. ! The Legislation Should be Enacted. | The Republicans in Congress appear to _ be on the verge of hysteria because the Postoffice Appropriation bill contains a i clause that will exempt assistant post- masters from the classified list. There are about 2400 of these officials in the country and the salaries vary between $1200 and $2500 annually. They were put in the classified list during the TAFT | administration, in anticipation, no doubt, | of the political results which followed in | 1912, Other postoffice employees have been under civll service protection for many years, and there is no disposition to interfere with them. But it is held by the majority in Congress that a palpable political trick ought to be defeated. The office of assistant postmaster is a peculiarly confidential one. Except in the very large cities the law provides no confidential clerk or secretary for the | postmaster. For this reason the assist- ant postmaster assumes this relation to the chief. In case of the absence or ill- ness of the postmaster, moreover, the assistant fills his place and the principal is responsible for his actions. If he is dishonest he has every opportunity to loot the office and the postmaster must make good any losses in consequence of his unfitness or other delinquency. In other words his services are essentially personal and the selection of such an of- ficial ought to be left to the man respon- sible. If the President, in the exercise of his power to extend the classified service, should order that the secretaries of Sen- ators and Congressmen should be pro- tected in their tenure by civil service rules, Republican Congressmen would justly protest. It would be subversive of the very spirit of liberty. Even if an at- tempt were made to put the secretaries and clerks of Congressional committees in‘the classified service there would be just cause for complaint. But the secre- taries of Senators and clerks of commit- tees are in no more confidential relation with their chiefs than the assistant stmasters. For this reason the pro- d legislation should be enacted. ——New York bankers insist on a regional bank in that city big enough to dominate all the other banks of that kind. They forget that the purpose of the regional banksis to prevent just that sort of domination. No bank ought to have such power over the finances of the country and if the Owen-Glass currency bill is properly administered no bank will have such power. Solution of the Problem. The Progressive orchestra has at last struck a note that promises harmony. It has sounded a call which will lure toward the band wagon. It has started a boom for Boss FLINN for Governor. Out of the western end of the State come these glad tidings with the assurance that “BARKIS is willin,”” as if that were nec- essary. Mr. FLINN “will not announce himself,” the statement adds, “until he has had opportunity to learn conditions in the Progressive conference at Harris- burg,” in session at this writing, but we assume that the announcement will be forthcoming. The leaders have too much respect for his vast bank balance to lose an opportunity to tap it. Really the nomination of Boss FLINN is the only solution of the Progressive problem. Possibly he would prefer the Senatorial toga, as he has been studying rhetoric and practicing oratory for some years. But GIFFORD PINCHOTT, another very rich and fairly liberal professor of the faith has set his heart on that “trophy,” and his long continued and intimate relations with ROOSEVELT makes his disappointment hazardous. Besides the office of Governor is no mean station and a Governor who is both eloquent and garrulous has plenty of chances for lip service. For that reason it may be as- sumed that Boss FLINN will be entirely willing to assume the office of chief magistrate of Pennsylvania. And if Boss FLINN were nominated for the office of Governor, what a carnival the camp followers might indulge. In the interest of another he is said to have spent nearly a quarter of a million dol- lars in the campaign of 1912 and during the campaign of last year, when he had no direct personal interest in the result, he paid nearly all the costs. If he is thus liberal when personal considerations are absent what might he not doin the event that nearly all the advantage would ac- crue to himself? Obviously “BILL” is the man for Governor. Clearly his nomi- nation is the solution of the problem. ——The Mexican General VILLA who ordered the execution, without trial, of 300 prisoners of war, the other day, is “cherishing up wrath against the day of wrath.” No settlement of the Mexican trouble will be just that does not involve the punishment of that fiend for murder. | cember 1st, the duty on woolen cloth LL NO. 3 The Cost of Roads. From the Philadelphia Record. a The average cost of the roads this State began to make between thyce aiid our years ago compares favorably the cost of roads in New York, and we trust that no investigation here will ever disclose the grafting that ‘has been sys- tematically practiced there for many years. Of the quality of the work done; of course, no financial statement gives any idea whatever. There is no work where honest inspection is so important as in road-making, for nowhere else can skimping and the substitution of inferior materials be so readily concealed. In looking into the cost of highway work Auditor General Powell divided it into four groups, the percentage con: tracts, the national roads, rcads made under the Sproul law and State aid roads. The average expenditure under the per- centage contracts has been only 3 and on the national roads about $13,400. The Sproul roads have cost $21,000 a mile, and the cost of State aid roads has been about $12,800 a mile. ei Except in the case of the Sproul roads these figures are not high enough to raise a presumption. of extravagance. Yet costs of more than $10,000 a mile upon roadbeds already in existence de- serve to be pretty carefully scrutinized in view of the report that Michigan is getting concrete roads for about that fig- ure and the fact that this city gets as- phalt streets made in small pieces for $2 and $2.10 per square yard. A Certainly the cost of what are called the Sproul roads suggests the making of grand boulevards, and some of the costs in this vicinity come up toward the im- posing figures of that group of highways. For example, 9.61 miles of road from Warminster to Buckingham cost $19,720 a mile, 3.57 miles from Media to the bridge over Chester creek cost $18,776 a mile, and 2.71 miles near Bethayres cost $18,715 a mile. : _ Of the roads contracted for from 1910 to the present there are 267 miles which have cost, or will cost, $13,900a mile, but if we leave out the ‘so-called percentage contracts we have 167 milés; that have. cost nearly three millions, an averagete more than $17,700 a mile. A mile of asphalt, five yards wide, and laid on a concrete base, would’ cost only ‘$18,400. The improvement of our roads is ‘a ne: cessity, but it demands technical skill, rigid economy and supervision and thé complete divorce of public works from politics. i Bo Cruel and © From the New York World. » % ; John Wanamaker’s view that “the per- son who sees nothing but disaster ahead is not a true American,” and that “the breeders of panic ought to be deported,” is no doubt conceived in an admirable spirit, but as a judgment to be execut- ed we must protest against it as cruel and unnecessary. i ‘ Our leading panic-breeders as lately developed include such men as “Uncle Joe” Cannon, James R. Mann and his Republican following in the House, Mr. Gallinger and the Old Guard in and out of the Senate. They are men who" have been long with us. They have at times been the government of the United States, and if all the time they have held themselves as essential to the govern- ment, for the prosperity and greatness of the nation, the country at large is par- tially responsible. Some of them are re- ally too old to be deported, and for the others there is yet reason to hope they may in time become industrious and use- ful citizens who will not try to breed pan- ic whenever the government is taken away from them. : We ask that they be given another tri- al under more careful watching in recol- lection of how well the same treatment worked with the old-time Federalists. It is a serious matter to think of deporting the whole leadership of a once great po- litical party. Challenging a Test. . From the Hartford Times. This story comes from Pennsylvania. A young man desired to marry a young woman. Her father doubted the youth's desirability. He loaned him $1,000 with the challenge to transform it into $25,000 within two years. He transformed it into $125,000. Glorious vouth! Ring the joy bells! i gg Exploits such as this were once the prime criterion of worth. Nowadays there is at hand not a majority but a multitude to rise up and ask, “Where did he get it?” Assuming that his courses were honest, at least to the extent of being legal, did he profit by the misfor- tunes of others? Did he create or destroy? Did his activities contribute to the sum of welfare? Did he have when he started a gentle heart and a pure mind and a’ clean soul; and has he preserved them Sei We know all about the $125,000, ut—! ’ In these days that Pennsylvania father is almost so old-fashioned as to be im- practical. New Tariff Lowering . Clothing Prices. From the Boston Herald. An evening contemporary, usually Re- publican in its politics, finds from a study of men’s clothing now on sale that the prices have actually fallen, as a result of the new tariff. It allows thatthe after- Christmas mark-downs ordinarily yield attractive bargains, but believes these seasonal effects do not wholly account for the prevailing prices. : X The duty on wool was taken off De- January 1st. Bonded warehouses are now disgorging thei Scsurmlations, and prices have dropped. Our contemporary adds: . “Customers who bought clothes today had no difficulty in believing ' that fiey were benefited by the new tariff aw.” SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Leaping from a third story window at the Westmoreland county home, Miss Kate Milbee, aged 55, a feeble minded and crippled lady. was picked up dead. * —George Moore and a compariion, of Punxsu- tawney, approached the home of the former, to see a burglar on the roof. They gave chase but ; | the man eluded them. —C. E. Palmer, for twenty-three years chief of police of Punxsutawney, has been re-elected for the twenty-fourth term, the highest compliment that could be paid his efficiency. =~ —Four Republican clerks in the State Treas- ury received notice of their dismissal, to take effect February 1. State Treasurer Young ‘said their places were desired for Washington party men. y ' I —So close was the escape from death of Henry Dewalt, at Hughesville grade crossing that the engine of a passenger train struck a rear wheel of hisbuggy. He was thrown out but neither ‘he was hurt nor his buggy damaged. ~—Former Judge B. W. Green, of Emporium, died recently at his home there, aged 65 years, He was appointed judge of the Clinton-Cameron- Elk district in 1906 to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Judge Mayer. He was a prominent business man at Emporium. —A bundle of stamps, supposed to have been stolen from the Mt. Pleasant post office, was | found under a loose board in the Suterville lock- up, where the suspect was confined before taken ‘tothe Allegheny county jail. An unsuccessful effort had been made to burn the stamps. ! —Johnstown anthorities are hunting some clue to the identity of a man who cut all marks out of his clothing, left the name of Carl Johnson on the register at the Lincoln hotel and strangled himself in his room. He was aged about 55 years and had considerable money about his clothes. _—The condition of Roman Dauksza, a Shamo- kin undertaker, who suffered blood poisoning in his right arm after he had pierced it witha needle, while engaged in embalming a body, is considered unusually serious and it is fearéd that amputation will be necessarv in order to save his life. —Mrs. Tall, a widow woman keeping board- ers at Latrobe, sent after one of them ina hurry a few days ago, when a satchel in which she had $425 left the house at the same time as did Oliver ‘Willis.” When the man was arrested he had $403 of the money, a watch, locket and bracelet. He was held for court. : —A fatal accident occurred Wednesday after- noon near St. Marys, in which W. J. Shaffer, a brakeman on the Hall and Kaul Lumber com- pany’s log train, lost his life. While making a coupling he got caught between the cars and had his back broken and sustained other internal in_ juries, which caused death. - —Fines of $100 each, costs and thirty days in jail were handed out to Louis Brusic and Joseph Warmus, of Wehrum, by Judge Telford, of Indi- ana county recently. The men had pleaded guilty to violation of the mine laws. Judge Telford thinks the courts should do something to lessen the number of mine fatalities. r —Enraged because he was refused the hand of a nine year old girl in marriage, John Vane, an Italian track worker of Bellwood, fired two shots ‘into the body of Guian Petroli, father of the child; and the victim is now in the Altoona hos- pital, hovering between lifeand death, while the assailant is ‘at large, with a posse of railroad police on his trail. _—The proverbial “ounce of prevention” saved ‘the lives of the family of Mrs. Blaine Parsons, of Punxsutawney recently. Mrs, Parsons carefully tasted the contents of a can of salmon, then de- | cided to give it to the cat. The animal died after twenty-four hours terrible suffering and the lady . was thankful she hadn’t included that salmon in . the family’s menu. —The Board of Crawford county commission- ers has decided not to take advantage of thé Mothers’ Pension act as passed by the last State Legislature. They claim the present system used by the board does not involve as much “red tape” and is more direct. In 1912 this county expended $7,114 for outdoor relief while in 1913 the total was $10,000. . —Should it be necessary for State Treasurer Young to call in the deposits of State moneys to keep up the amounts in the daily depositories, about 225 banks will have to give up sums rang- ing from $5,000 to $25,000. The deposits will all be applied to the general fund. There is about $800,000 in the sinking fund held by 100 banks, but this will not be affected. —Courts will be asked to settle the muddle in South Greensburg where there are eight duly elected council-men instead of the legal seven. By some mistake the election proclamation call- ed for six councilmen instead of five and now there are two organizations, each having elected a chief of police. Four of the men are Repub- licans and four are Socialists. —Six valuable horses, fourteen head of Hol- stein cattle, with crops, machinery and vehi- cles, were burned when fire of unknown origin destroyed the new barn on the farm of W. S. De- Armitt, in Shaver’s Creek valley. Loss is $5,000 without insurance. Mr. DeArmitt and family were enjoying a barn dance on a neighboring farm and found the structure ablaze on their re- turn. —That William Lechtenfield, whose body was found riddled with bullets in Briar Creek tcwn- ship, Columbia county, December 19th, paid $30 for his own murder is the conclusion announced by officers who have been working for weeks on the case. Lechtenfield, they say, furnished the revolver and bought the cartridges that were to penetrate his own body. Then, according to the theory, he hired the assassin to commit the deed and stood in the bushes while his siayer shot him. —There was a thrilling time in Youngwood while state troopers were. trying to subdue a maniac. A doctor had been summoned and he called the troopers. The maniac, who had taken possession of the house and held everybody at bay with an ugly knife, could not be persuaded to drop it until an expert marksman put a bullet through his wrist. He promptly grabbed the knife with his left hand, but his hold was not so firm and he was overpowered. Ammonia fumes had been tried on him, but without effect. —Three men were sitting in Jacob Mitchell's shoemaker shop in Duncansville Saturday after- noon when Thomas Hamell entered and flour: ishing a revolver made the declaration that he intended to shoot one of them. Two of the men bolted for the door and got out. David Mobley, aged 18, thinking Hamell was joking, made no move and was shot through the breast, dying almost instantly. Hamell ‘ran to the woods but was captured late Saturday night. He makes the defense that he thought the revolver was not loaded. a —William Dunn, now of Watsontown, was one of the Pennsylvania emergency men who hustled south when the battle of Antietam was inpend- ing, to help fight the Confederates. Although on the job when his country called, he was ab- sent from Muncy when a paymaster visited that place, some time later, to settle with him and the other members of Captain Lloyd's company. The others got their money, but when Dunn re- turned the paymaster had gone. For fifty-one years Dunn has kept that account receivable in mind, and now feels that the time to realize upon it has come. He has written to Auditor General Powell explaining the circumstances and making a request for payment, and Powell, who has done some fighting himself as a soldier of a later war, ~The best Job Work denelhere. will mail the veteran a voucher and instruct him how to present his claim in a Jurmal way. J Wo gi