Deo Matdy. INK SLINGS. "——That parting of Dave Lane and Hampy Moore was sad but not exactly tearful. «—Possibly the one great failure of Andrew Carnegies’ life was his futile effort to die poor. —TUrge your boy to hang onto his army insurance. He'll never get more as cheap and good as it is. —Let’s see, how long ago was it that the new Republican Congress promised to cure all our ills in a few weeks and then adjourn and go home? —The apple crop being almost a complete failure in Centre county those who have been looking forward to storing a little hard cider for mince pies and other purposes can eat the pies without the kick in ’em and look for something else to satisfy those other purposes. —When men work eight hours a day instead of ten they lose two hours of production. When production de- creases cost increases and will contin- ue to do so therefor the disgorging of cold storage warehouses, the selling of army food supplies and threatened prosecution of meat packers are but temporary palliatives for the high cost of living. —Hecla Park is a resort located at Mingoville, near the centre of Walker township, Centre county. It has thir- teen houses, a brick mill, an ice bar- racks and a baseball team that had the nerve to horn into Bellefonte’s inter-ward league and put the cleaner on its leaders so effectually that Belle- fonte is all upset and Lawrence Mec- Mullen, Joe Herman and Charley Workman are so swelled that the su- pervisors of Walker are about to be petitioned to move the road fences so the highways will be wide enough to let them through. —1It is beginning to look very much as though there might be an oasis of about four months in the Prohibition desert. We have no inside informa- tion to warrant the statement but we would not be surprised if the Presi- dent were to declare the army demo- bilized some time next month and the war-time Prohibition ban lifted. When the army is demobilized he will have no alternative in the matter though it seems too bad that since the country is taking so gracefully to the new or- der of living that the old should be given even so short a come back as it would have until January 26th next, when the new federal amendment will become operative. —Because the “Watchman” last week published the fact that the larg- est grand total of children borne by one woman is recorded as sixty-two an anonymous correspondent writes from Pittsburgh to the effect that he believes it to be in line with seme of | STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. NO. 32. YO oy BELLEFONTE. PA., AUGUST 15, 1919, Opposing Another Treaty. Some weeks ago Republican Sena- tors in Congress protested vehement- ly because the President had with- held an agreement made in Paris be- tween the representative of the Unit- ed States, Great Britain and France in which a pledge was made that in the event Germany attacked France after the withdrawal of the army of occupation, the United States and Great Britain would immediately in- tervene for the protection of France. That was the right kind of a treaty, they said, because it meant some- those eminent advisers of Republican Senators, Judge Hughes and Elihu they have seen the instrument they have changed their minds. Now they are quite as openly op- posed to that agreement as to the peace treaty and for reasons that are equally absurd. “It is a confession of the worthlessness of the League of Nations,” one of them declared the other day. “The League of Nations,” he added, “is intended to prevent war and if it is of any value at all the agreement for the protection of France will not be needed.” As a matter of fact the agreement is in- tended to serve the purpose of pro- tecting France from German ven- geance until the League of Nations becomes operative. - That is quite a formidable undertaking and consider- able time will be required to put its machinery in force and get it into op- eration. Meantime France is naturally ap- prehensive of an organized attack from Germany as soon as the army of occupation is withdrawn. The late war was very destructive to France and exceedingly exhausting. On the other hand Germany suffered com- paratively little in material resources and being stronger in man power as well as richer in everything except patriotism, might easily make hostile incursions, into the already: impover- ished territory of France. The agree- ment was for the purpose of preven ing such disaster during the period in which the League of Nations is in process of formation.” But President Wilson had a hand in shaping both the stories we have told of our catch- es of fish on Fishing creek. While we are utterly at a loss to know who in Pittsburgh dares to question the truthfulness either of the “Watch- man” as a purveyor of news or the writer as a fisherman his nom-de- plume: “An Ardent Admirer” must certainly have been inspired by envy of the daddy of those sixty-two and not by anything the “Watchman” has ever said or done. —1It is a pleasure to note that the ‘Hon. William H. Keller will have no opposition to his candidacy for a full term on the Superior court bench. The time for filing nomination papers for that office having passed without any other jurist essaying to contest the election with him his name will be the only one to appear on the ballot. While Mr. Keller is an uncompromis- ing Republican and he would certain- ly be elected, no matter what Demo- crat might have entered the lists un- der that polite subterfuge ‘“non-par- tisan,” we are pleased that it is as it ig for we know of no Democrat or of any other Republican, for that mat- ter, who could carry a cleaner char- acter, more conscientious devotion to duty or more scrupulous integrity to the bench of Pennsylvania than will the Bellefonte boy who has become an honor to his profession in Lancaster. —The time for the county prima- ries is approaching. There are many men aspiring to become the nominees of one or the other of the two politic- al parties. All of the aspirants may be regarded as good citizens and far be it from us to traduce the character of any of them but we have a word to sav to both the Democratic and Re- publican voters of Centre county. A word in their own interest. From the men to be chosen as your nomi- nees next month the managers of the business of forty-twe thousand peo- ple will be elected. They will have charge of the deeds to your homes, the mortgages, the wills, the appraise- ment of your properties, possibly the welfare of your orphan children, the levying, collection and disbursement of taxes you will pay; in fact of everything in which you should be most vitally interested. While all of these aspirants may be good men it doesn’t follow that they will make good officers. Use your judgment in voting for them at the primaries, be as careful with your ballot as you would be in putting a man in the way of taking care of your personal mat- ters. Just because you have a person- al acquaintance with this one and not with his competitor is not a good rea- son for voting for the one whom you know. Find out something of the other fellow, his character and his ability, and if he seems better fitted for the particular office for which he is a candidate than the one you know personally you are a better citizen if you vote to nominate him and Jeave the personal element out of it . the opposition. ¢ covenants. and that ‘is. the . reason of 3 Thus. far. Senator . Borah has not- charged President Wilson with abducting Charlie Ross but he hasn’t exhausted all his opportunities yet. He has made many equally absurd accusations against the President and may come to that later on. - Death of Andrew Carnegie. The death of Andrew Carnegie calls to mind his long continued and extensive activities in philanthropy. It is said up until June of last year he had given away the vast sum of $350,695,653, all of which was dis- bursed for the benefit of mankind as he understood it. He established 2811 free public libraries at an ex- pense to himself of $60,364,808. It is true that his beneficences along cases burdensome, on the communi- ful beyond estimate, nevertheless. They presented to millions of people opportunities for acquiring knowl- edge that would have been denied to them otherwise. This is greatly to his credit. Mr. Carnegie did much valuable philanthropic work in other direc- tions also. His contributions of | church organs helped greatly in pop- ularizing as well as strengthening .the religious efforts and organizations. His Carnegie Foundation, Carnegic Institutes and Carnegie Hero Fund have served the purposes for which they were designed with equal benefit to the causes of science, research and civilization. But probably his great- est public beneficence was his opposi- tion to monopoly. Unfortunately he abandoned that too soon. When he sold his steel properties to the Steel trust he registered an unconditional surrender to the had previously antagonized. Of course the world was bettered by Mr. Carnegie’s munificence in the various courses his benevoleft mind ran and though “charity covers a mul- titude of sins” his beneficences can- not obscure the fact that his great | wealth was the fruit of a vicious sys- | tem which impoverished millions while it made a few men rich. With an understanding of the facts Mr. Carnegie contributed his moral and material support to a system of tax- ation, under the pretense of protec- tion, that enabled him to seize an un- earned share of the wages of his em- ployees until his wealth had grown to satiety. He made better use of his money than most of the tariff graft- his philanthropy. ——Just by way of prediction. There will be no candidate for the Re- publican nominatien for Mayor of Philadelphia against J. Hamilton Moore, on primary election day. In entirely. other words the Vares will support Hampy. thing. In this view of the matter Root, cordially concurred. But since these lines imposed taxes, in some ! ties he favored. But they were help- | sinister forces he ers but the record casts a shadow over ! General March is Right. © Most of the thoughtful civilians of the country will concur in General { March’s views on the subject of chem- {ical warfare. “The War Depart- ! ment,” General March stated before | the Senate committee on Military | Affairs, the other day, “is opposed to the use of poisonous gasses and be- lieves chemical warfare should be abolished.” Senator Chamberlain, of Oregon, who hasn’t done much else than criticise the War Department within the past two years, took issue with the military expert. “More than thirty per cent. of the American cas- ' ualties in the great war were by gas,” ' he declared, and for that or some oth- er reason he is opposed to abolishing | chemical warfare. The use of poisonous gasses as in- | struments of torture in war was in- | vented by Germany and shocked the | humanitarian sentiment of the whole ! civilized world. Next to that twin atrocity of the German mind, the sub- ; marine craft, it was depended upon | to destroy the opposing armies and | the fact that thirty per cent. of | American casualties are ascribable to | gas it may be said the worst expecta- | tions concerning it were fulfilled. But | that is no reason why it should be i continued as an instrument of war. { The tendency of advanced thought is " against the greater atrocities both in i war and peace and the policy of the . War Department at Washington to | oppose chemical warfare is both hu- | mane and creditable. It is said that during the war American chemists developed a gas | more deadly and effective than any used by Germany and no doubt if the subject were pursued American gen- | jus would find the lead in this as it 'has in most other things. But the j aim of recent years has been to re- duce rather than augment the horrors of the war and it is creditable to the ‘military authorities of the United States that a willingness to lead in ‘the movement is expressed. While "the hope that wars are ended for all time may not be realized the desire to minimize the cruelties of war may i still be continued and the first step in . that direction should be to -abolish | chemical and undersea warfare. {~__Painters in New York are strik- ling for a forty hour week and one dollar an hour., A lot of strike- i breakers .might be recruited here for | Bellefonte is full of pood painters who | are putting in about twelve hours a day walking the streets and doing ; nothing at all. Exact Statement of the Case. | When President Wilson said in his | referring to the high cost of living, or elsewhere until the | treaty of peace is out of the way and | become the chief concern of our gov- ernment and the other governments . cisely. “Until then,” he added, “bus- iness will inevitably remain specula- { that, with heavy losses or heavy gains as it may chance, and the con- | gains and the losses. There can be | financial and economic system is on a war basis.” | rection of the chairman of the Repub- | lican National committee the leaders ' address to Congress, the other day, | that “there can be no settled condi- : tions here | the worl—ef liquidating the war has , of the world,” he stated the case pre- tive and sway now this way and again | sumer must take care of both the | no peace prices so long as our whole By concerted action under the di- | of that party are striving to continue | this state of uncertainty. They esti- | mate that their chances of success at | the approaching Presidential election | is strong or weak in the ratio that the | people of the country are prosperous ' and contented or suffering and discon- ' tented. With the high cost of living harrassing every household in the : land the party in power is blamed for financial and economic blunders and these scurvy politicians are ready te multiply public distress in order to increase their chances of victory in 1920. That is the crux of the matter and should be treated accordingly. With the restoration of peace con- ditions prosperity would come in every line of endeavor. Manufactur- ers are eager to operate their mills and factories and commercial enter- prises are impatiently awaiting the opportunity to move forward. But the uncertainty of the future restrains all agencies of business from action and the Republican Senators are hold- ing up the ratification of the peace treaty to prolong the doubts and in- crease the distress. Legislation may mitigate and investigation lessen the trouble but neither can cure the mal- ady from which the country is suffer- ing almost to the breaking point. The Republican party is responsible for the present suffering throughout the land. ——The successful investigator of the high cost of living will direct his inquiries toward the cold storage warehouses. ——The repeal of the tax on ice cream probably expresses the Repub- licam method of reducing the cost of . living. “#4 Tjeut. E. R. (Dick) Taylor, Senator Lodge’s Foolish Speech. | Dr. William Frear’s Opinion of Tioga County Potash Deposit. Senator Lodge, of Massachusetts, de- livered his long promised, or threat-| Farmers in Centre county, as well ened, speech against the peace treaty | as the State at large, were unusually on Tuesday, and as Senator Williams, | interested in the story spread broad- | 3 i i ae a | cast last week of the discovery of im- | 5 2 S) Jims T. Oifge isc par | mense beds of potash in Tioga county jm of i e Sena 2 orm ee on oo ‘and in order to satisfy himself as to Sign Be Shon ox y SMa fo 5% y i the Ahondn of the alleged discov- nt. ery Dr. William Frear, vice direct has been in Congress for a quarter of | i chemist of the orien ory a century and ought to be familiar tion at State College, visited the with the public life of the world. Yet! mountains in Tioga county where the after three months of preparation he | big “find” was made and his report was able only to rehearse and reiter- | on same is not of such a character as 2% the ig in Befinjor | to induce farmers to indulge in any = oe, os as mater Borah, | Sesssive jubilation over the possibil- al ato randagee, of ; j i Connecticut, have been doling out to! Sia Som in Pe = oe confuse the public mind for months. | Dr. Frear’s complete report on same His strongest point was a compari- | is as follows: son of the League of Nations to the! «The deposit reported i i 1 : the Tioga Holy Alliance. No honest man with count D Forte in Ly : y potash discovery was one of the intelligence of an oyster would | niter or saltpeter, the nitrate of po- assert an analogy in these proposi- | tassium. This compound is formed in every soil by the action of certain tions. Then he asserted that the cov- ‘ ] enant of the League of Nations would | bacteria upon nitrogen-containing or- | ganic matters. We are not certain bind the government of the United | 3 a A 2 States to send troops to help King | that, in nature, it is formed in consid- Hussein to suppress an insurrection Stuble milly. ia pny oiher way a _in Hedjaz; that it bestows upon Japan | s0. 5 ur arid regions, in BD ro or China the right to regulate our! tected from the rain, such as covered immigration laws and upon any na-! barn yards, stable floors, bat caves, tion interested to frame our tariff | etc. laws. If he believes those things his | “The material is very soluble in proper place is in some asylum for water; hence large accumulations do fechle minded invalids and if he) lot occur in the soils. of humid re- : 3 gions; but the drainage waters carry doesn’t believe them his statement | it away. Deep re wells often qualifies him for a cell in some State | .ontain a very little nitrate. It is prison. probably present in the moisture con- As a matter of fact Senator Lodge | tained in many rocks, so far as that has written himself down as a cheap | moisture is derived from soil drain- demagogue willing to sacrifice his|age. But no large accumulations of country for a vague hope of partisan | it are known in any rock bed below advantage in the future. The whole | surface in the humid regions of the : : fo world. world is patiently waiting for the res- These: facts make. the. oxivtence in tortion of peace in order that indus- | pappsylvania of any great, rock-con- try and commerce may resume activi-, tained deposit of saltpeter improba- ties and restore prosperity. But Sen-' ple, ator Lodge holds everything up for, “On Tuesday I visited the rock in the reason that he imagines the de- | question. It is a weathered mass of feat of the treaty will help the Repub- | Small size projecting from the hill lican party into power and some of Slope. It is much stratified, that is, his friends to opportunities to loot. It mals up o numerous Shin layers iy is to be hoped that his sinister expee- | fon; orad € Crovices Bro ted from tati al be di ted. Bat the action of rain. White to brownish ation will be disappointed. ut | white encrustations appear on the meantime the people of the country | surface of these crevices in the mid- should charge their memories with | dle and lower parts of the exposed the record. | front of this jutting rock. This-en- ! crustation, a sample of which I took, : containes niter. ve military instructor at the Huntingdon “However, several facts of possible reformatory and a candidate for the importance give rise to a questioli” as nomination for sheriff ‘on the Dem- to the immediate source of this niter ocratic - ticket’ in Centre county, crustation extends through the great spent Sunday with his family in this | 3 Lr place and brought home with him a! hay fe Fock of Thich mis jutting copy of “Brother Jonathan,” a paper. “I was told that this outcrop had i published by Wilson & Co., in New long been known locally as ‘the salt- | York, being the issue of July 4th, peter rock,’ but that otlfer outcrops 1846, over seventy-three. years ago. | that occur at the same elevation on " : 3 ! i ; The ‘paper, according to its heading , £10, 5070 NE B20 R0 SCh, TREES. ve was issued but twice a year, the jon Fourth of July and Christmas, and it | the floor of which is covered with the a | dung of wild animals. This dung may must have kept the printers of those | be the source of the saltpeter. days pretty busy, at that. It is an| «Whether the niter encrustations eight page sheet, eight columns of 17 | appear also in the great mass of the . ems measure to a page, and the pages | rock back under the hill is now being were 24x36 inches in size. The paper | determined, If they do not, the de- was extensively illustrated with wood | posit is scientifically interesting but engravings of a very high class and | not commercially important.” the quality of the paper and ink they WILLIAM FREAR. used in those days were evidently vastly superior to those of the pres- ent day, as the paper still retained its | Farm Hands Destroy Tradition. From the Christian Science Monitor. : and as to the extent to which the en-. original color and the pictures were as sharp and bright as when the pa- per came off the press. The first page was devoted to a lengthy review and , two big illustrations of the capture and execution of Major Andre dur- ing the revolutionary war, and a pic- There is very likely a good deal of truth, although the situation is one that invites exaggeration as it gets into print, in the complaint of farm- ers in the United States that men coming home from the war and en- gaging for work on farms are de- manding shower baths and well-aired sleeping quarters. In many cases these re 53d to re youn men who HWatihrman? ia 4 ._, 1 worked on farms before they went to ore bir r Poca: the war and never thought of such a of a pamphlet published by the 'enn- | thing as a shower bath; but the life sylvania State Chamber of Commerce, | in the camps has established new ideas Harrisburg, containing a complete list | of living, and the bath is essential. of laws adopted by the Legislature | Report comes from the farms in the at the 1919 session, as compiled by | Delaware valley that fully 80 per Robert Haight, director of the legis- | cent. of the men who return to farm lative bureau. The list is classified | work are more insistent on baths and under various headings and while | fresh air in ther Toome Ehan onhigy ; : | er wages. they are naturally but brief epitomes | percentage of the new farm workers of the various laws they are explicit | stood for this program, it would show enough "to cover the Act in general. | that military training had inculcated In brief it is a valuable work for! some very good habits, and it will ready reference as to what laws were | probably well repay the farmers to passed and approved by the Gover-: install the shower bath and consider NOT. i it a useful farm implement. ture of the city of Milkaukee, Wis., as it looked at that time. ——Mr. Carnegie said it would be a ! Get Them Out of the Country. disgrace to die rich but it will hardly | ... = ine DuBois Express be necessary for friends of his be-| Commissioner "Cominetti of the Toaved dependents 0 take up 3 colies- , immigration service, says he has in on fo pay the expenses oi his iun-, tow 3,600 undesirable aliens all rea- eral. 1y Jor deportation, and i pias ask- Tr i ed for an army transport for that pur- kt ay be remarked ie a pose. He says it would cost about considerable part of the working $800 a person to send the undesirables force of the Republican party of Phil- | away on ocean liners, and he feels | in the West Chester | that is too much. By deporting these ; all at one time on an army transport, i the cost would be greatly lessened. — It is said that the Philadelphia ; That’s the idea; get rid ‘of the entire North Penn bank didn’t collect inter ' lot as quickly as possible. est en loans. Well it didn’t pay the =a principal on deposits either. adelphia is now jail. | Fit Punishment. “From the Wheeling Intelligencer. 4 ; It appears in the news from Amer- Se a , ongen that Mr. Hohenzollern has had ; to go house hunting. Now his real sion and be equally truthful. Rta begins. g : Most everybody agrees on the | proposition that everybody else ought to economize in order to reduce the cost of living.’ | From the Louisyille Courier-Journal. | “President Wilson is giving serious : Si————————. _ | attention to the hight cost of living.” : ——Subscribe for the “Watchman.” | He’s a salaried man, you know. SR RR Ee lle SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE —The Luther League of Pennsylvania will hold its annual convention at Te highton on the 26th, 27th and 28th of Au- gust. ! : —Out of 6770 students examined in the rr # - : Altoona schools last term, 5834 were found to be physically defective. Only twenty- three per cent. of the total enrollment wag normal. : ’ : —The Susquehanna Silk Mills company, a corperation having widespread interests in Central Pennsylvania, is floating a $4,~ 000,000 bond issue for the purpose of plant: improvement, purchase of new machinery, etc. The company gives ity assets as property worth $19,000,000 unincumbered. —Dr. John C. Bateson, of Dunmore, Lackawanna county, instituted mandamus proceedings last week in the Dauphin county court to compel the State Board of Licensure to reinstate him as a practicing physician in Pennsylvania. His license was. taken from him on what he declares to be false charges. : —J. E. Flook, collector of county and State tax in Salladasburg borough, Ly- coming county, has settled his 1918 dupB- cate. He asked for only one exoneration and that was for eighteen cents. This is the smallest exoneration ever asked by any tax collector in Lycoming county, and probably in any other county in the State. —The Clinton Natural Gas and Oil com- pany, which holds options on nearly 20,- 000 acres of leases and two natural gas wells in the Kettle Creek region, expects to drill ten new wells this season and build trunk gas lines to Renovo. Dr. J. D. Coney, of Williamsport, is the treasur- er of the company, and W. P. Felix, also of Williamsport, the secretary. —Strawberry growing will be one of the new industries of the Lehigh valley next year, according to the farmers, who say they have arranged to plant hundreds of thousands of strawberry vines this fall. - The failure of the crops from the New Jersey section to reach Hazleton each spring leads agriculturists to believe they can capture the trade in that part of the State. —The equipment of the Coryell Con- struction company, of Williamsport, locat- ed at Avis, Lock Haven, and on the state road near the upper island bridge in Clin- ton county, was recently sold at sheriff's sale. Abram Fischer, of Williamsport, one of the plaintiffs, purchased considerable of the equipment, and other parts of it went to Max L. Mitchell, representing another of the plaintiffs. —Edward Davis, aged 65 years, of Mun- son, Clearfield county, who is alleged to have dynamited his own home and that of a neighbor, a month ago, was taken to jail at Clearfield. Davis was discharged from a Philipsburg hospital, but when he arrived at the jail the physician in charge found him in such shape that he had to be taken to the Clearfield hospital. Ome of his ears is said to bé in such shape’ that amputation may be necessary. ° : . —The first application in Pennsylvania ’ for the incorporation of an air transporta- - tion company has been laid before the . Public Service Commission. The concern - is’ the Easton Airplane Service company. : Its proposed capital is $10,000 and Jacob Beck. of Easton, is treasurer. No route'is specified. Another application from Pitts- burgh, for the incorporation of a company to manufacture airplanes and conduct a common carrier business, was rejected as it was a two-fold proposition. . ~ ~—~What remains of the crops not ruined by the recent rains in Lancaster county is threatened now with destruction by the army worm, so called,. which has appear- ed at Clinton. All the growing oats in a large field on the stock farm of Adolf Go- ble, near Annandale, one of several in- stances, has been practically destroyed by these worms, which eat away the heads of the oats. To prevent the pest from spreading to the corn and ether crops, the oats was saturated Saturday and Monday with kerosene and the entire field burned. —New State Highway designs to indi- cate detours and announced as ‘‘stage- coach red” in color, with a white arrow, have made their appearance on many roads of Pennsylvania so that the people may know which way to go to avoid construc- tion work which is under way on more than 400 miles of main highway this month. Heretofore black and white card- board signs have been used, but they have been ripped to pieces by storms and have proved unsatisfactory in other ways, and metal signs that can be seen for consider- able distances will be employed. —Michael Kobylmyk, a grocer, of Ches- ter, was fleeced out of $900 last Thursday via the gold brick route. Two men called at his place and offered to purchase his business. The owner showed great inter- est. The strangers went out and returned in a short time with a third friend. The third man exhibited something that look- ed like gold and told Kobylmyk that he had plenty of the gold and that he could get him $1000 worth of it for $900. The keeper of the small grocery took the bait, went to his safe and produced $800 in $20 bills. The stranger took the money and was to return in a short while. The other two men at a time when Kobylmyk was waiting on some customers left the store. The police have little hope of securing the money. —The members of the Hakanaki Camp Fire Girls, of Northampton, near Allen- town, had the greatest scare of their young lives a few nights ago, when their cabin on the Pocono mountains, where they are having a two weeks’ outing, was visited by a huge black bear. The girls as a rule slept on the porch but that night, because of the cold, they went indoors. “About midnight there was a terrible commotion on the veranda when chairs began to tum- ble about, tables upset and general rough- house was started. Some of the bravest of the girls looked out and saw the bear but made no effort to disturb him and in half an hour he left after having stoleu all the victuals and milk. The bear was seen half a mile away the next day and natives say it was a very large one. —Much excitement attended a calithum- pian serenade tendered Clarence Brown and his bride, of near Corinne, Delaware county, recently, when several hundred residents of the locality appeared at the home of the young couple equipped with horns, tin pans, drums and other uoise- producing affairs, including a ‘horse fid- dle” the tones of which could be heard for several miles. During the height of.tRe din a driving horse belonging: to Walter Hoopes and valued at $300, bolted and broke its neck in a fall over a wire fence. Following this Miss Maude Brown, sister of the groom, suffered a serious attack of heart trouble. due to the excitement, and a physician worked a half hour to restore her. The bride and groom, after the ex- citment had ® subsided, tendered all the members of the party a treat of ice cream and cake.