Dieworralic atc BY P. GRAY MEEK. INK SLINGS. —Incidentally, let us remind you that there are only thirty-one shopping days until Christmas. ——The Germans are making an heroic fight but what’s the use. In the end they must yield and the longer they resist the heavier the penalty will be. —There are more than forty-six thous- and automobiles, not to mention the mules, in Missouri. And, we reckon, it is some question as to which are the hardest to handle. —The large demand for safety razors recently reported from Austria-Hungary rather discredits the Russian reports that the Czars forces have practically annihi- lated the Austrian army. —Talking about this “made in Amer- ica” slogan for the upbuilding of Ameri- can industry what’s the matter with a Bought in Bellefonte slogan for doing justice to the business men of our com- munity? —The average cod-fish weighs a little less than eight pounds and lays seven mil- lion eggs. The average chicken hen weighs about four pounds and lays——well the report would probably be better if she were crossed with the cod-fish. ——As we have said before, our liber- ality to the Belgians is magnificent. But according to the newspapers there are a lot of starving women and children in the coal regions of the middle west, and charity ought to do something at home besides beginning. A —We had the first real bite of winter on Tuzssday morning. The thermometer hovered around 24 degrees in the morn- ing and did not rise above the freezing point all day. The farmers who are late with their corn husking suffered most, but there are not many of them in the county. —According to the latest official re- ports from the clerk of the House at Washington there will be 233 Democrats, 193 Republicans, 7 Progressives, 1 In- dependent and 1 Socialist in the next Congress. This will give the Democrats a majority of 31 over all other parties combined. ——If the Democratic State organiza- tion had given the attention to candidates for Congress in this State which honor and party obligations required, there would be more Democrats in the next Pennsylvania delegation in Congress and the Democratic majority in the House would not be so meager. : —So far as Thanksgiving is concerned turkeys are not worth 24cts. the pound. If you are well and happy you should be thanks giving on Thanksgiving day if you have nothing more than bean-soup on the table. It isn’t what.you have to eat that counts. It’s the fact that you've been spared to eat anything. —The Chicago Tribune's idea of adopt- ing the orphan Belgian children rather than sending succor to them isa good one. Thousands of childless American homes could be made happier than they are and the little folks of stricken Belgium could be brought up far better by adopted parents than with none at all. ——-The Democratic candidate for Con- gress in the Erie district was elected in spite of the open opposition of the Unit- ed States District Attorney for the West- ern district, who lives in Crawford coun- ty. But the Democratic candidate for Congress in the Schuylkill district was not able to overcome the secret opposi- tion of the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, though he lived in another dis- trict. —All those big orders that CHARLES M. SCHWAB is bringing home from Eu- rope to his Bethlehem mills will be heralded as signs of prosperity that have so quickly followed the commission Penn- sylvania recently gave Mr. PENROSE to rewrite the tariff law. Take it from us. CHARLEY was on the other side booking the orders long before there was any thought of PENROSE'S stupendous ma- jority and he would have booked them, just the same, had PALMER or PINCHOT been chosen. Business is everywhere for the getting and if you have the goods you can find someone to buy them, tariff or no tariff. : —When you are wondering why you pay thirty cents the dozen for eggs that cost only fifteen twenty years ago and forty cents the pound for butter when twenty was regarded as a fair price in 1894, just bear in mind that there are more than one hundred million mouths to fill in this country today, whereas there were only sixty million two decades ago. While our population has been in- creasing by leaps and bounds the num- ber of cattle and chickens in the country has actually been decreasing during the past twenty years. Time was when nearly every family in Bellefonte, for instance, had its own cow. Now you can count the number almost on the fingers of your one hand. You remember when nearly every Bellefonte family raised two or more pigs. But the cows left their cards on the Diamond and the pig sties were more odoriferous than the rose gardens so aestheticism and Dr. Dixon said they must go. They have gone and we rail because the milkmen have raised the price of milk and sausage costs twenty-five cents the pound. STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 59. BELLEF ONTE, PA.. NOVEMBER 20, 1914. NO. 46. More Outrages Contemplated. | A Lesson. Moving in the Right Direction. | The obviously stupid, if not actually | For two days last week a party of more | The American Federation of Labor venal, Democratic organization of Penn- | sylvania, proposes to continue its faction- i al fight in the party, notwithstanding the | rebuke administered to it by the voters : on the 3rd of November. That is to say ‘a movement is on foot to change the name of the PALMER-MCCORMICK League of Philadelphia and convert it into an in- strument to embarrass the regular Dem- | ocratic organization of that city. The “leaders” as these treacherous toy poli- | ticians style themselves, want some sort | of an organization “distinctly in sympa- | thy with them,” and reason that their . hope in this direction lies in the rehabil- itation of the now odorous PALMER-Mc- : CORMICK League. «4 Three years ago a group of selfish office seekers seized control of the Demo- cratic organization of the State by meth- | ods which would have appalled ordinary | burglars. This group consisted of | GEORGE W. GUTHRIE, VANCE C. MCcCOR- | MICK, A. MITCHELL PALMER, JAMES I. | BLAKSLEE and WILLIAM B. WiLsoN. All these men except WILSON and PALMER | had been discredited and discarded office | seekers and WILSON and PALMER were at the time in the enjoyment of places con- | ferred upon them by the old leaders of | the party. In spite of their incompetency the party came into power in the coun- try at the subsequent Presidential elec- tion, and they all scampered to the pie- counter. Every man of them wanted an | office. ! . As has before been stated in these | columns Pennsylvania had no part in the | Democratic victory of 1912. The party in the State was harmonious, enthusias- | tic and hopeful. The candidates were ; popular and capable. But the managers of the campaign were so obsessed with their own ambitions that they sacrificed every party interest in order to entrench ! themselves in the power they had un- | scrupulously usurped. With the Repub- | lican party divided they failed to bring | their own party to the polls and Woob- ROW WILSON firmly fixed in the hearts of the Democratic voters, polled the small- | est vote, with a single exceptipn, that had besn cast for a Democratic candidate for President in half a century. “Under such citéumstances modest men would have refrained from asserting ' claims to the favor of an administration which they had no part in placing in power. But these selfish office hunters are not modest. They began a seige of the President's office the day of his in- i auguration and continued it until their | absurd ambitions were satisfied. WIL- : LIAM B. WILSON was appointed Secretary of Labor, GEORGE W. GUTHRIE made | Ambassador to Japan, JAMES I. BLAKSLEE got the office of Fourth Assistant Post- master General and PALMER and Mc- Cormick were slated for the offices they.’ coveted. Then they turned the party over to a lot of servile incompetents who have wrecked it completely. Now they propose to perpetuate their power for evil by perpetrating new out- rages. The creation of a body “distinct- ly in sympathy” with the defeated and rebuked State organization is for the purpose of displacing the legally organiz- ed Democratic committee of Philadelphia by methods contrary to law. This will prolong the factional strife which has already worked such havoc in the party and prevent the reconciliation of ele- ments essential to future party prosper- ity. But the selfish office seekers who are drawing fat salaries and exercising official authority are not concerned about such things. They know that President WILSON will be re-elected and hope to hold their jobs. ——The Bellefonte High school dis- played an unusual amount of school spir- it last Saturday afternoon on account of their football team’s game with the Clearfield High school. The students paraded the streets led by the High i school band, and on the Diamond sang the High schodl song and gave the High school yell. The result was they had a large crowd at the game on old Hughes field and the contest was one worth watching. The Bellefonte High school | won by a score of 12 to 0. To-morrow | the High school will play the Lewistown ! High schocl in Bellefonte and on Thanks- | giving day the Bucknell Freshmen team will be here for the final game with the High school team. Both these games will be worth seeing, as the High school has been playing good football this year. Give the boys a boost both tomorrow | and on Thanksgiving, as they deserve your patronage. These will probably be the only games you will have a chance to see this season. i ——And we have every reason to ap- prehend that VILLA will live a long time. ——The WATCHMAN enjoys the proud | distinction of being the best and cleanest county paper published, Sr rd i leaders. than one hundred students from the Michigan Agricultural College at Lans- ing, Michigan, made Bellefonte their headquarters while the football team of their institution was keeping an engage- ment to play at State College. So far as our observations and personal inquiries were able to inform us they were just ordinary boys, as boys go. The average type, evidently, of the student body of the institution in which they are matric- ulated. Search Bellefonte with a fine-tooth comb and you wont be able to find a person who has an unfavorable criticism to make of one of the party. Clean-cut looking, genteel in their behavior and polished in their manners they were an object lesson to boys of - every class and condition. So far from home that almost any unmanly act they might have in-, dulged would scarcely have embarrassed them upon their return, yet the shade of the father, mother or sister of each of them might have been his constant com- panion while in Bellefonte and no other feeling than pride would have been aroused. They were not “sissy” boys, either. They were swelling with good red blood. Their team showed that on Beaver field, their band showed that in Bellefonte, their rooters showed that because many of them had the spirit to make unusual sacrifices of personal comfort to get here to cheer for their gridiron heroes. They were just a crowd of manly fellows of whom any parents, any institution, ought to be proud. There was nothing in Bellefonte espe- cially to amuse them, vet they had a in that verdict. But their idea of a good | time is what puzzles us most when we | compare it with that of other groups of College boys we have known. Therein lies the singular superiorty of these Michigan Aggies. They cheered and paraded the streets and found out more about Bellefonte’s history, her prominent citizens and industries in twenty-four hours than many boys who have spent their life-time here know. There was no ' rowdyism, no intoxication no vulgarity ‘nothing that ‘we wouldn’t be happy to know that the students from everyone of our local institutions emulate both at home and abroad. ——The Democratic membership in both houses of the General Assembly has been reduced to a minimum but the ¢ Democratic organization had no interest in Democratic candidates other than those for Governor and United States Senator. An Evil and a Remedy. The esteemed Johnstown Democrat, ' whose able and worthy editor has been re-elected to Congress, makes the re- : actionary suggestion that “there should { be a revival of the convention system by the Democrats of this State to the ex-: tent at least of having an authorized | representative body to declare the party program and outline the principles and policies for which it stands. Party solidarity must become a thing of the past,” continues our Johnstown con- temporary, “if the individual platform becomes the fashion.” The evil against which this complaint | is made is certainly present and the sug- gestion of a convention to “declare the party program and outline the principles and policies for which it stands,” is a remedy. But it is not the surest, quick- est or best remedy. The suppression of the arrogant, incompetent and selfish bosses who usurped the power vested in the State committee by law would achieve the purpose much more effective- ly. The hungry office grabbers and office brokers who tried to force their individ ual prejudices and opinions upon the party as a platform, violated the law and outraged every principle of Democracy, and are to blame for the disaster which followed. : “We have no objection to a convention to “declare the program and outline the principles and policies for which it stands.” Such an assembly of earnest and active party workers at intervals would have an inspiring influence and wholesome effect upon the party. It would be the means of bringing the strong men of the party together, more- over, and making them acquainted with each other. But in any event the usurp- ers, the office seekers and patronage brokers,should be driven from their stolen places of power. . ——President WILSON has probably learned that Pennsylvania Democrats prefer to choose their own candidates and are determined to select their own '——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN: struck a true note, during its annual con- ' vention in Philadelphia last week, when it put the seal of its reprobation upon militarism. That is not only the bane of labor but the fountain of evil. The resolution upon the subject was introduced by the international typographical union and it pledged the federation to the sup- port of “any plan which has for its pur- pose the disarmament of all nations to the furtherest extent consistent with the preservation of law and order in the world.” That would be the longest and best step in the direction of industrial improvement. It would lift from the back of labor its most crushing burden. The devastation of Belgium and the misery in nearly all parts of Europe at this time are the logical and inevitable consequences of militarism. For years to come the whole world will be com- pelled to stagger under the weight of debt entailed by the spirit of militarism which has been fostered during the last quarter of a century. But for such bur- dens, ascribable to that cause, there would be little, if any, cause of quarrel , between employers and employees. The expenses of folly must be paid, however, and capital shifts the charge upon the weaker partner in the industrial system, labor, and men, women and children suffer. The lockouts and the strikes are the results. In the resolution in question the Amer- ican Federation of Labor has set its face in the right direction. Peace will . bring plenty and contentment and not only | glory enough but prosperity sufficient to go around and capital and labor will work together in harmony and happiness. i splendid time. They were of one accord The man or party or organization which . favors the policy of militarism is not only | an enemy of his country but a foe of his ! kind and should be avoided as a pesti- i lence. Take no stock in a proposition to prepare for war by increasing the army ,and navy. The preparation is not for glory but for poverty and want and mis- ery. In time of peace and in all times | prepare for peace. ——The Prolonged drought in Centre “coudity, as well as other portions of the State was partially relieved by a hard ..rain which began on Saturday night and continued without cessation all day on Sunday. Considerable rain fell in that length of time but the ground was so dry that it soaked in as it would in ‘a sponge. Cisterns were filled up but it made no perceptible effect on the springs and streams. It grew colder Sunday night ! and Monday and by Tuesday morning | the thermometer was down to eighteen degrees above zero. Cool weather is predicted for the week. New Currency Law in Force. The opening of the Federal Reserve banks, on Monday, puts the new cur- rency law in complete operation. How efficient it may prove to cure the ills of {our commercial and industrial life re- | nine to be seen. If it fulfills the ex- | pectations of its friends there will be no 1 { more panics in this country. If the pre- | dictions of its enemies are realized the | end of financial security is in sight. Hap- .pily the first prophesy of evil has not | been fulfilled, however. The opening of the regional banks and the transfer of | reserves from individual banks to the regional institutions, caused no dis- turbance of credits or strain upon re- sources in any section of the country. The principal purpose of the new law was to inject flexibility into the currency system. Under the old system, whenever there was urgent need for an increased { volume of currency the circulation con- tracted. Possibly this was unavoidable. | But most people came to the belief that | it was the consequence of conspiracy to , promote speculation. It was a compara- tively easy matter for the big banks in i the centres of commercial operations to inpound the currency in their vaults and ‘release it only at their pleasure or !caprice. That hoarding of the currency ' was the main cause of industrial paraly- sis. It was likewise a prolific source of speculative operations. The new law will avert this evil There can be no “cornering” of the cur- - rency while thislaw is in operation unless the members of the Federal Reserve Board at Washington and the managers | 1 | | Re-organizing the State Democracy. From the Allentown Democrat. ; It must be plain to every Democrat who has no selfish ends to attain that the party in Pennsylvania stands in the greater need of re-organization than it did three years ago, when one set of bosses sought to dethrone another set. At the time the Democrat warned the Democrats of the State to go slow in the matter of taking possession of the party machinery. We had absolutely no con- fidence in the Palmers, the Blakeslees the Guthries, the Morrises and others who set themselves up as the only Simon-pure Democrats in the State. We always have been suspicious of men who affect a holier-than-thou attitude. We believed that the sole object of those who three years ago sought to get control of the machinery of the party in the State was to get possession of the federal patron- age, for at that time it was already ap- parent that there would be a Democratic administration at Washington after the fourth of March, 1913. Our judgment has been vindicated. The Democrats of the State handed over the party to Pal- mer, Blakeslee, et al. and they have ruin- ed it. But their selfish ends have heen attained. They have dealt out the feder- al patronage. Their henchmen have the jobs, so what do they care even if the party is so thoroughly demoralized that it will require heroic treatment to bring it back into fighting form for the presi- dential and congressional elections two years hence. This can never be done with Palmer, Morris and Blakeslee in command of the Democratic forces. The rank and file of the party have lost all confidence in these leaders. Their con- tinuance in command of the Democratic forces of the State will mean that it will be impossible to get the Democratic vote out on election day. The condition of the party in the State is pitiful. The most important office filled at the recent election was the Unit- ed States Senatorship and on this vote the Democrats have been humiliated by being forced into third place. Even the Progressive party, which is so near dead that the death rattled in its throat, poll- ed a greater vote than was cast for the Democratic candidate. With the present leadership how long would it be before the Democratic party of Pennsylvania would be forced to forfeit third place to the Socialists? Fortunately, there will be no State campaign next year. Consequently be- tween now and the presidential cam- paign of 1916 a re-organization of the party can be effected. If Mr. Palmer and Mr. Morris had a due regard for the proprieties they would resign their posi- tions of national committeemen and State chairman respectively, so that the work of re-organization might go ervunidirder: ed. According to reports Messrs. Palmer avi Morris contemplate daily this very thing. The Non-Partisan Ballot a Failure. From the Philadelphia Ledger. It is a bitter disappointment to those who advocated the non-partisan primary and ballot as applied to the judiciary to have forced upon them the conviction that the experiment has been an utter failure. The experience of Philadelphia in the selection of the judges of the Municipal court and of the State in the choice of Supreme and Superior caurt | judges proved beyond question that the power of the political machine was in no way curbed by the new system. but, on the contrary, made it much easier for the machine to name the judges. More seri- ous still, the pretense of non-partisan- ship compels candidates for judicial office to engage in political struggles thorough: ly incompatible with the spirit of judicial non-partisanship. The parties still have their candidates, party machinery is openly used in their behalf, and the re- sults reflect not the untrammeled judg- ment of the voters, but the manipulation of shrewd politicians, and often the ex- penditure of large campaign funds. The non-partisan primary and ballot are fail- ures and ought to be abolished. Return of the Penroses. From the New York Globe. A mistake will be made if the Pen- roses and the Cannons construe what has happened as their victory. They wrecked their party two years ago by forcing, through control of the party ma- chinery, a nomination that the party had declared itself averse to. The spirit’ of their leadership was condemned at the polls not only by a plurality for Presi- dent Wilson, but by a larger popular vote for Col. Roosevelt than for Mr. Taft. ‘If the Republican party hopes to win in two years it must keep in the back- ground its old reactionary element and turn for its leadership to progressive members of the party. Let it be clear that the old standpatism is in control and that it has not learned anything, and the progressive element in the party, in- stead of trying to maintain a new organi- zation, will support President Wilson by millions. The best thing for the Wilson administration yesterday was the return to Congress of a number of Republican bourbons. Intelligent Republican activity should run in the direction of minimizing their influence. Premature’ Presidential Talk. of the regional banks are recreant. Each | From the Altoona Times. regional bank is supplied with sufficient All this talk about “making” Governor- emergency currency to meet the require- | elect Brumbaugh the next President of ments of the district in which it is locat- ed and the emergency currency must be issued under the conditions provided by | { | this nation is’ pure moonshine. Two years will intervene before the people elect a successor for President Wilson, and much may happen to make the sug-: law, when the emergency arises and the | gestion of over-enthusiastic admirers demand is made. The new system went into operation on Monday without creat- sound foolish. Mr. Brumbaugh will have opportunity to demonstrate his capacity for higher office before he is called to ing a ripple upon the surface of the sea ater responsibility, and upon the man- 2 Pps To |e in which he meets his duties will |d epend in large measure the reception his name ‘will receive before the national : | convention of his party. - sith ‘ey was pai br party 1mprison the armory. The case is in SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. —Frank D. Jerald, a forester for the State, who was accidentally shot by Arthur Callahan and taken to the Williamsport hospital, is dead of his injuries. i —Two Clinton county young men slept togeth- er the other night. While one ‘was dreaming he gave his companion a terrific punch in the face, breaking his jaw. : : —C. H. Weir, a prominent resident of Clymer, Indiana county, has been arrested on the charge of stealing $3,355 from another resident of Cly- mer whose name is not mentioned. —Four members of an organized conspiracy to intimidate and blackmail have been convicted in Westmoreland county and will probably spend some time in the western penitentiary. ~The’ burgess of DuBois has determined to put a stop to violations of the town’s cow ordi- nance. Hereafter bovines caught roaming the streets will be locked up until redeemed by their owners. —Miss Margaretta Louden Bell, of Newport, Perry county, celebrated the 9th anniversary of her birth last Thursday. A company of friends enjoyed the day with her. She is in fine health and in possession of all her faculties. —A cave-in at a Jefferson county mine disclos- ed a petrified tree, about 200 feet below the sur- face. When found the entire tree was there. The stump was broken off and taken to Sykes- ville where it was put on exhibition. —By an explosion of gas in a coal stove last Sunday morning Assemblyman-elect G. M. Al- corn, of DuBois, was badly burned about the face. Fortunately his eyes were uninjured, al- though the eyebrows were burned off. —George L. Comp has been appointed pastor of the Methodist Episcopal church of Wallaceton to succeed Michael B. Bubb, a well known minis- ter in the Central Pennsylvania M. E. conference, who has accepted a call to a Presbyterian church in New York State. —Professor Arthur C. Ferry, instructor in’ the Lewistown High schools, purchased a quart of oysters Saturday. He bit on something solid and upon taking it to a local firm of jewelers found that he had a pearl of great brilliancy. They made him an offer of $30. —Johnstown has a citizen who claims that be- cause he pays nothing for shoes and stockings and compels his family to earn their own living, he has money with which to buy liberal quanti- ties of beer. The mayor gave the chap a con- tract to clean the public highways. —The town of Irwin, which has just celebrated its semi-centennial, never had a murder case in the courts and hasn’t had a business failure in five years. About 60 per cent. of its people own their own homes and nearly 70 per cent. are church members. That’s a very fine record. —Daniel D. Smeal, of Irvona. died in the Clear- field hospital Wednesday morning from injuries sustained the previous afternoon when the horse he was driving to Clearfield took fright and threw him from the buggy, dragging his body into Clearfield. He was a well known liveryman. —A Johnstown merchant discovered an alleged shoplifter in a queer way. The woman carried a baby which one of the heads of the store admir- ed and desired to take in his arms. The woman excitedly refused when it was discovered she had a couple of unwrapped skirts between the infant and herself. —Five young men have been lodged in the Westmoreland county jail at Greensburg, charg- ed with the murder of farmer Wedge, who was fatally shot a few nights ago. Ernest Reeping, one of their number, says he fired the fatal bul- let with the intention of frightening the farmer. He had no thought of killing him. : —The home of John Andrews, at Woolrich, Clinton county, has been stricken by the death of two daughters, both of whom died on the same day last week from typhoid fever. One was 21 years old, the other about 9. Another daughter and a babe, the child of the olderdeceaseddaugh-: . ter, are seriously ill from the same disease. —Burned to death by boiling taffy was the fate of F. Eugene Ryland, 17 months old, of Hollidays- burg. While the child was sitting on the floor near the kitchen range a pan of molasses taffy" was spilled on his head, running down his face and over his body. The boiling substance stuck: to the skin and burned deeply before it could be removed. —Barn Destruction continues. Among the latest is that of John Lyons, near Hughesville, : Lycoming county, and with it went to destruc- tion a valuable team, one driving horse, five head’ of cattle, several hogs, all the farm implements and large quantities of corn, oats and hay. Mr. . Lyons was badly burned on the arms and hands ° while trying to rescue some of the horses. —Mrs. Ellsworth Young, of Duboistown, Ly- coming county, tried to hasten a fire in a kitchen. range by using coal oil. The result was an ex- plosion which resulted in the destruction of the dwelling and the fatal burning of the woman. The catastrophe occurred shortly after noon last Wednesday and the woman, who was only twen- ty years old, died in the Williamsport hospital about 60’clock the same evening. —Samuel Coy, a harness maker and livery sta- ble owner, of Bedford county, committed suicide: at his home by hanging himself early Saturday morning. Coy resided at Woodbury and was widely known throughout the county. He was 45 years of age, and recently he had brooded: over financial troubles, he having been sold out by the sheriff. His father-in-law discovered his body swinging from the rafters in the Coy barn, about 5 o’clock on Saturday morning. . —Mrs. Gilbert Springer, of Patton, narrowly escaped having her head scraped off on Sunday when an automobile in which she was riding plunged under a heavy guard rail. The woman sustained fractures of both jaws and a cheek bone, and her little daughter was badly cut about the head. Mr. Springer, who was driving the car, dodged as the car passed under the guard rail, after swerving from the road following a tire blow-out. Mrs. Springer may not recover from her injuries. —Don Gray, who was paroled out from the Re- formatory to I. Scott Buck, of Warriorsmark township, on October 22nd broke his parole and had been working quietly for G. E. Raugh, Ty- rone R. D. 2, until Wednesday last. Mr. and Mrs. Raugh, who are moving away, said that they would be away for a time and had given young Gray work in setting up fodder in the field until their return. He hid in the barn and after Mr. and Mrs. Raugh left he broke in the house, took $25.00 in money and left. —A. H. Miller and Samuel Steel, of Somerset, took to Uniontown recently eighteen head of cat- tle for D. B. Zimmerman, who owns 20,000 acres of mountain land between Gibbon’s Glade and Five Forks. These cattle were bought iby Mr. Zimmerman last spring and shipped to his Glade farms to graze. They weigh 1,800 pounds apiece. He has sold them and is shipping them to Johns- town. They are fat and will be sold to butchers. The cattle are of Canadian birth and some of them have horns five feet long. —Joseph Snyder and his two sons, Richard and Arthur, are under arrest at the Forty-fourth regi- ment, Niagara Falls, charged with high treason in attempting to take Austrian reservists "across the border to the American side. They are lia- ble to a death penalty. The Snyders have been under surveillance for some time and were caught in a trap. They were offered $40 to land four Austrians on the American side. The mon- and four supposed Austrians were them. A squad of militiamen sur- ; and isoned the Snyders in d ie the hands of the ° of finance and we sincerely hope and confidently believe it will accomplish . every expected reform. = | / —