eee Pemorralc atc INK SLINGS. __So far as headlines are concerned the Altoona papers probably count that day lost that does not produce a local shooting or hold-up sensation. Tf the corn in Centre county keeps on stretching skyward farmers who merely top it will have to use step- ladders when they do their husking. — Surely there will be a flood on | east Bishop street if the rather rotund gentleman of the cloth who is deriv- ing so much pleasure from the new Hughes out-of-door swimming pool is permitted to catapult himself into the water from that ten-foot diving plat- form. —The Senate has passed the House bill prohibiting the prescription of beer as medicine. As soon as the House concurs in an amendment at- tached to it the amended bill will probably be passed finally and then the doctors of the country will lose cases without number. — The Secretary of the Treasury has announced that ordinary governmental expenditures for July, 1921, were $322,000,000. Inasmuch as this was $15,000,000 more than was spent for governmental purposes in July, 1920, the last year of the Wilson adminis- tration, we rise to remark that Mr. Harding is getting back to “normalcy” like the old woman kept tavern out west. — President Harding’s much prom- ised lessening of the burden of taxa- tion turns out to be all for the rich and nothing for the poor. The excess profits taxes of the great corporations and the surtaxes of those whose in- comes run from fifty thousand to a million a year are to be cut out entire- ly and to make up what the rich won’t have to pay higher tariffs, and con- sequently higher prices, are to be put on the things the poor have to buy to subsist on. — The elimination of the “nuisance” taxes will naturally make a favorable impression on the public, but it is like throwing dust in our eyes so we can’t see that the taxes on the essential things have not been lowered. Ice cream sodas, sporting goods, etc., may all be classed as luxuries and the tax on them is only trifling, though be- cause we purchase such things daily it becomes irritating and assumes far more importance in our minds than it should have. It is a foxy play and will accomplish exactly what it is being made for by convincing all light-heads that substantial tax revisions are be- ing made. —_Our senior Senator has had him- self interviewed on prohibition en- forcement, especially as it affects ~ Pennsylvania. He has gone on record « as favoring most drastic enforcement of the law, and is shocked at the re- ports that many enforcement officers have become rich through connivance with bootleggers and illicit dealers. He has issued orders that the entire force be dismissed and others assign- ed to the work. -We would be inclined to applaud the Senator’s stand if we could bring ourselves to believe that he is less concerned about what crowd is getting rich through illegal traffic than he is about violations of the Vol- stead law. —Congressman Keller, Republican, from St. Paul, Minnesota, has just made public a statement to the effect that President Harding has' already “assumed more power than any of his predecessors.” He declares that his party organization is bound, hand and foot, to Wall Street, and that the pub- lic may expect nothing good to come of “its stupid, selfish, short sighted policy.” We are not quite ready to cry: We told you so! The President hasn’t had a fair chance yet, but with governmental expenses running high- er even than they did last year and plans for tax revision that will save for the rich and mulct the poor the President and the First Lady will have to cut out posing for cameras long enough for the former to make good on a few of the promises he proclaim- ed with such sincerity from the front porch last year. —Chautauqua, so far as Bellefonte is concerned is probably gone “flooey.” At least only sixty-three guarantors could be secured last Wednesday and as one hundred are requir- ed the prospects of a course next season are poor. It has long been a question in the writer's mind as to whether Chautauqua really fills the mission it was conceived and projected for. In Bellefonte it cer- tainly has not and, in all probability, other towns in the course not so vaunting in their ambition to leave an impression of intellectuality, are little different from our own. It is a sad commentary on our search for knowl- edge but it must be admitted that the great majority of those who have at- tended Chautauqua here have enjoy- ed and approved it only according as its amusement features have compar- ed with those of Lyceum bureaus or regular theatrical offerings they have seen and heard before. The splendid lectures and the daily talks of the su- perintendents have fallen on very few willing or receptive ears and the gen- ral atmosphere of the tent has given the impression, time and again, that they were only being endured because of the lighter divertisement to follow. The Chautauqua movement is a splen- did one, but Bellefonte is really too much occupied with bridge, one-piece bathing suits and what old Mrs. Grun- dy “seen and done” to see that the big tent on the school grounds was raised for some other purpose than to show off a troupe of performing Japs or a cage of trained lions. i i | — vr aeralic RO VOL. 66. Extra Session Probable. The not too cheering intelligence comes from Harrisburg, through the medium of press dispatches, that it may be necessary to assemble the Leg- islature in extra session in order to clear up the financial confusion in the fiduciary affairs of the State. Experts called into service by the Auditor General have exposed the fact that ap- propriations made by the last Legisla- ture, added to hold-overs of former sessions, will exceed the revenues by | many hundreds of thousands of dol- ‘lars. The revenue expectations of the | State administration have been sadly disappointed and demands on the i treasury are so pressing that State | Treasurer Snyder. acknowledges the | situation is embarrassing. In order to bring the Senators and | Representatives in the General As- | sembly into what he considered a | proper state of servility to suit his | purposes Governor Sproul encouraged i all sorts of profligate appropriations. | He justified himself in this extrava- ‘gance by recommending tax legisla- tion on every conceivable subject. Tax on anthracite coal, gasoline and sev- eral other subjects have not yielded ! generously. The tax on coal has been . provided by law continue to run with | the result that an extra session of the Legislature alone promises hope of relief. And even that promise is pre- carious. ’ This state of affairs has existed for , many years and no doubt has been known time. But it was kept under cover as long as possible STATE RIGHTS AN of Washington’s “Best Minds.” The Pennsylvania Republican State committee treated the woman voters of the party rather shabbily in mak- ing them eligible to some unimport- | ant places in the organization. In the appraisement of the Pennsylvania Re- publican State committee the women voters of the party are “easy marks.” Flattering one or two with bogus badges of leadership appears to those party leaders amply sufficient, and Mrs. Barclay Warburton was made vice chairman of the committee, with- out power of succession in case of va- cancy in the chairmanship, as full compensation for the services of the entire sisterhood. Recent events, how- ‘ever, indicate a different condition of affairs in other States. We learn through the press dis- patches that the Republican leaders in Congress place a higher estimate up- on the value of women votes. The House committee on Ways and Means, “in revising the tax laws of the coun- try, sends out an appeal to the women voters of much greater potency. That committee has tentatively agreed to reduce the luxury tax on women’s bon- ' nets which cost over $15 each, to the . held up absolutely and that on gaso- : line has proved almost equally futile. - But the expenses on the princely scale extent of ten per cent. and a corres- ponding decrease on the tax on silk stockings that cost over $2 a pair; on “shoes that cost over $10 a pair and on "waists, petticoats and kimonos that cost over $15 each and nightgowns ‘and pajamas that cost over $5 each. It is inferentially admitted by these “pest minds” that such articles cost- “ing less are not luxuries and must pay. to the party managers for some | “for the good of the ' party” and the advantage of those : taking profits out of the operations. Some time ago an investigation by expert accountants revealed . the em- bezzlement of funds from one of the departments. The culprit attempted to commit suicide and almost “spilled the beans,” with the result that the investigation was called off. The oth- er day another official was exposed, who confessed, and thus ended that inquiry.. But the payment of bills due cannot be avoided indefinitely and may Sone “an exposure that an end the iniquity. — There is always somebody and It used to be said that men’s hearts may be reached through the stomach and there is at least a semblance of proof of this statement in past exper- jence. The Republican ‘members of the House committee on Ways and Means seem to think that the short ‘cut to the heart of the woman voter is by way of her pocket. Women are proverbially averse to paying taxes “and equally eager for finery in dress. some way to take the joy out of life.’ Just as Governor Sproul had come to the hope that he would own a consti- tutional convention the treasury em- barrassment bobbed up and showed the people that he is not a superman after all. Naughty “Andy” Mellon. The incorrigible boy of the Harding administration is Secretary of the Treasury “Andy” Mellon. He simply won’t “stand without hitching” and positively refuses to be tied up. This _is probably because he is more a busi- ' ness man than a politician. And he is some politician at that. Not long ago the United States district attorney for the Pittsburgh district started an in- quiry into the relations of some Pitts- burgh politicians and capitalists to the distilling industry in that section. It is known that before going into of- fice Mr. Mellon was rather intimately The Republican leaders in Congress probably put these facts into conjunc- tion and deduced the brilliant idea that the greater part of the female vote could be corralled by reducing the tax on gewgaws and fripperies dear to the heart of women. Besides the party had promised tax reduction on some- thing. The information that Russia is ‘sending $2,000,000 to help Mustapha Kemel to maintain his usurped author- ity is likely to dampen the ardor of those benevolent persons who are beg- ging money to save Russian children from starvation. ; eee lp eee: Expensive Official Luxury. The head of the publicity bureau of : the Republican National committee during the Presidential campaign was a man named Lasker, of Chicago. He is one of those who for one reason or another acquire the title of “live wire” The burden of his complaint against the Democratic party was the extravagance of the war administra- tion, and he published thrilling stories “of needless expenditures for army and associated with one of the big distil-. leries. He got out of it in some way but a good many people think that it was an “accommodation deal.” In any event the court official in question was getting exceedingly “warm” in his search for the facts in relation to the Pittsburgh “whiskey interests.” the inquiry had not been stopped it might have led the searchers close to the vaults of the Mellon banks. But it was stopped in a timely, if not ex- actly a dramatic way. The district attorney was removed from office and Mr. Mellon himself took the com- mission of his successor to Pittsburgh and superintended the transfer. Quite _ as suddenly as the official personnel was changed the liquor investigation was discontinued and has not been heard of since. Possibly this was an accident. But probably it was part of the plan. ; But this was more a business than a political affair and while Mr. Mellon is amenable to reason and rule in bus- iness he is different in politics. It is said there was an implied understand- img in Washington that taxes would be greatly decreased by the present Congress in order to fulfill the prom- ises of the campaign, and that the evil eonsequences could be cured by defi- ciency bills after the next Congres- sional election, But Mellon positively refused to join in the simister enter- prise. He boldly declared that any re- duction of taxes would create a defi- ciency and that would be bad business. He ‘furthermore demands an increase in taxes and that wiM be ruinous. Naughty Andy. ; We were never going to have anything te do with the League of Na- | ‘tions or any instrumentality of that appealed strongly to the tight-wads of the country. As a reward for his services to the Republican machine in that way he has since been appointed chairman .of the United States Ship- “ping Board, a war emergency corpor- "ation which spent vas: It has been said that if | sums during the war. Chairman Lasker was before the House committee on Appropriations, the other day, to give reasons for his demand for $300,000,000 to meet the requirements of the board for the next fiscal year. He acknowledged that there are 200 auditors at present on the pay roll of the board but said it. was necessary for him to employ for- ty expert accountants at salaries rang- ing from one hundred dollars a day to ten dollars a day, and three attorneys at $25,000 a year each; one at $20,000; five at $15,000 each a year; one at $12,000 a year; four at $10,000 a year each and one at $9,500, making a total of $216,500 a year for his legal staff, besides special counsel without limit as to number or expense. The salaries of the officers of board or bureau or whatever it may be call- ed are also on a princely scale. The published report of the affair doesn’t state the amount of Mr. Lasker’s sala- ry, but being a “live wire” it is prob- | ably somewhere in the six figure class. There are three vice presidents of the organization, two of whom draw down salaries of $35,000 each and the third $25,000 and the vast army of other employees eat up money so voracious- ly that the $300,000,000 demanded by : Lasker appears like a modest sum. of course the board has other sources of revenue to keep the wolf from its of- fice door. The millions realized from the sale of ships are used by it with- out regard to accounting. ——Senator Penrosé¢ knows that the Vare machine has been robbing the iniquitous creation but Ambassador ' people of Philadelphia of millions of Harvey is “sitting in” in the Supreme Council in Paris. : 1 dollars annually but he hasn’t courage enough to call a halt. D FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., AUGUST 12, 1921. NO. 31. Governor Sproul’s Vaulting Ambi- tion. Governor William C. Sproul has been in control of the affairs of Penn- sylvania for two years and a half. He came into the office he occupies with a ! reputation for business experience and ability that inspired absolute confi- dence in the minds of the people of the State. Previous to his election as Governor he had served upward of twenty years in the State Senate i which gave him, or ought to have giv- i en him, a thorough understanding of the conditions of the State as well as the needs and evils of administration. There were signs here and there of sinister motives and dubious influenc- es in his actions but it may be said that fully as much as any of his pred- ecessors he enjoyed public confidence. But soon after his induction into the office Mr. Sproul began to reveal an unexpected element in his make-up. He became a candidate for President before he was warm in the seat of the Governor and disappointed in that am- bition set out to achieve other distinc- tions at the expense of public inter- ests. Apparently he had conceived the idea that the people have no care for expenses so long as great results are achieved and he plunged into am- bitious projects in educational lines, road building, welfare schemes and other enterprises which kept him on the front page of the newspapers, plunged the people into hot water of fear of the costs, which finally peter- ed out because of an empty treasury. The principal, and on the whole the most dangerous, ambition of the Gov- ernorship is that to own and control a convention assembled to form a new fundamental law. No other Governor of Pennsylvania and no Governor of any. other State has ever let ambition vault to such dizzy heights as this. It might invest him with power to con- trol the destinies of the Commonwealth for half a century and no human crea- ture should have such power in a free State. If he had proved a super man as Governor he might have some ex- cuse for such ambition. But according to the best information obtainable he gy SS STE ete A friend of the “Watchman” tipped us off to a good bear story ear- ly in the week, and we confidently an- ticipated giving it to our readers with all the thrills, ete. It had to do with a big, black bruin, which suddenly made its appearance when two men were held up in the Woodward Nar- inspection. Now it just happened, ac- cording to the story, that he devoted his attention to the rear tire which suffered the puncture and he evidently | didn’t like it as he deliberately pro- ceeded to give it a good clawing, rip- ping big holes in the tire with his sharp claws. He then sniffed around the machine and turning tail ambled off up the mountain. The story in de- our attempt to confirm it met with poor success. | garage where the men were part of the week, and came there with | the tire wired together, but he did not | tell him the trouble was caused by a bear. teem | —Uncle Sam is gradually getting | the whip hand of his family of forty- eight children who have reached the - dignity and supposed independence of ' Statehood. By pampering here and ' spanking there he is insidiously tak- "ing their rights away from them so that ere long we will have no sem- blance of true Democracy. eel ere —— —The new moon is lying away ‘round in the southern skies, so that ' the weather dopesters will say that we will have a period of warm weath- er. — Senator Newberry will be whitewashed all right but the coat will not be thick enough to conceal the black spots on his Senatorial toga. ~~ ——If the Harding disarmament conference accomplishes nothing else it can be relied on to increase the pub- lie debt and add a trifle to taxes. ——Because of Harding, Hoover and Hays some simple minded Washington correspondent calls it a h—— of an administration. : ——1Ireland is enjoying a rest any- way and for that reason the negotia- has upproached no such high estate. rows as the result of a punctured tire, | and instead of being frightened at the dead fliver proceeded to make a close | | i | ! 8 ; nd © pod their tire replaced admits that ‘which are about the navy equipment and supplies which | Gp 5 car was in his place the latter ! making any profits in | ‘on inccomes from $6,000 to $50,000 “relatively: small Hughes, tions between Lloyd George and De- Valera are worth while. —Let us hope that in sending ' American prisoners home Russia will "not slip Emma Goldman across the water to us. ——— A —— —— , —Some early risers are still con- vinced that they saw a light frost on Monday morning. : Meddling and Muddling. From the Philadelphia Record. Almost any one of the American prisoners in Russia, just released un- der the agreement between Secretary Hoover and the Soviet, will be a more dependable source of information as to the character of the Lenine-Trotzky regime than Senator Joseph I. France, if we may believe the report of the lat- ter’s behavior in Riga on the eve of his departure for Berlin. ~ Senator France early last spring de- serted his seat in the United States Senate, from which he is supposed to look after the interests of the State of Maryland in particular and those of these United States in general, and with a great blare of trumpets an- nounced that he would investigate Russia. Later, of course, the world was to be told the true story and to be advised as to its future duty to that distressed country. David R. Francis, it is true, had attempted this, but Francis was a Wilson Democrat; so naturally he failed. It took France longer than Francis to go into Russia. He knocked at Lenine’s gate quite a while before he was admitted. When he got in, finally, he was personally conducted about the country by the Bolsheviki, and though his story was much shorter than that of Mr. Fran- cis’, he heard—if he didn’t see—more. The Soviet officials were at his elbow to tell him everything. : About a week ago we heard that Senator France was ready to come home. Then came a dispatch that he had been favorably impressed by the present government of Russia. To many of us this seemed a premature and impolitic expression, and probably not authorized. But the Senator’s un- seemly explosion at Riga on Tuesday night, when he publicly accused Dr. Ryan, the American Red Cross Com- missioner in the Baltic States, of hav- ing instigated the revolt of Kronstadt last winter, utterly spilled the beans. According to the belief of men ac- quainted with conditions in the dis- turbed Baltic section, there is no truth in the accusation against Dr. Ryan. Senator France admitted himself that he had no proofs in hand, but he had been promised that they would be for- warded to him from Moscow! Under the circumstances it is rather surpris- ing that the redoubtable Dx. Ryan was able to refrain from carrying out his Fo MET —Twenty suits ‘against owners eof dogs in Perry county who had failed to secure licenses for their animals were started by the State Department of Agriculture... — Clearfield county is credited with hav- ing 4056 persons who can not read nor write, in a map showing the extent of il-. literacy in the various counties of Pennsyl-_ vania, which has just been issued by = Thomas E. Finegan, state superintendent of public instruction. ; Robert, three year old son of Robert Schechterly, of Nescopeck, is seriously burned as a result of grasping the end of a fallen live wire. He was knocked down twice by the electriejty and grasped the end of the wire the third time. The wire carried 2300 volts. He will recover, doc- tors believe. —When Mason Buckman, 70 years old, a farmer residing along Nescopeck mountain, did not come home for his supper one night last week, his housekeeper, Mrs. Ma- ry Serger, went to the barn to look for him and found the aged man dying on the barn floor. He had fallen thirty feet from the hay mow. — John P. Gray met with a horrible ac- cident while at work in the Helvetia mines, Clearfield county, last week, when his over- alls were caught in a pump and his foot slowly drawn into the gears and crushed so badly before the power was shut off that it was necessary to amputate the leg a few inches below the knee. ’ — While Dr. G. Stabili, a noted Bucks county nerve specialist, his wife and baby were soundly sleeping, burglars entered their bedroom early Monday morning and stole the physician's trousers and $1300 which were in the pockets. A ladder was used by the burglars and they entered the doctor's sleeping quarters by removing a screen, ; i —R. G. Dunn, 60 years old, died sudden- ly at Lewistown Saturday night while seat- ed in a car on the Lewistown and Reeds- ville electric railway on his way home from the Viscose plant, where he was em- ployed as a machinist in the reeling de- partment. Dunn was a former railroad man and spent years in the train service of the middle division. ~The county treasurer of Schuylkill county has entered suit against fifty-five merchants for non-payment of mercantile taxes. More than 450 others are also to be sued immediately. The merchants against whom proceedings have been brought will now have to pay the taxes with the cost of legal proceedings added, which will prac- tically double the tax. Many are objecting to increases made in the tax valuations by state agents. — In endeavoring to save his automobile from destruction after it took fire, Harry H. Crom, of Columbia, Pa., pulled the gas tank from under the seat and threw it into the street. The flaming tank struck Val- entine Iossman, a 12 year old boy, who was passing, The flames ignited the lad’s clothing, and he was seriously burned all over his body before Crom and others sue- ceeded in pulling the flaming garments from the boy's body. The automobile was only slightly damaged. __With his congregation already gather- ing to hear him deliver his last sermon be- fore starting upon his vacation, the Rev. 1. McGill, pastor of the Methodist Episco- pal chureh at Homer City, dropped dead reported threat to “punch Senator France's head.” | amie. That head appears not only IRIAVs been too easily filled at Bolshevik pumping stations, but there are in- dications, that it is otherwise un- worthy of the Senatorial toga drap- ed below it. To make publicly a ser- ious charge against a reputable offi- cial, without tangible proofs to back it up, constitutes behavior considera- bly more paranoic than parliament- ary. Ee ] Tax Reduction for the Rich. From the New York World. President Harding has always tak- | en pains to emphasize that the tax re- vision to which his party is pledged includes and means also tax reduc- tion. What is presumably the Ad- ministration’s plan of tax revision has now been submitted to the House Ways and Means committee by Secre- tary of the Treasury Mellon and it! does include a large measure of tax | tail was a good one but unfortunately | reduction. It would repeal the excess-profits The proprietor of the taxes, much to the relief of the more to have wealthy and monopolistic corporations, only ones left this era of Re- | publican prosperity. It would repeal all of the income surtaxes above 40 per cent. to the great relief of the very rich whose incomes run from $50,000 | to $1,000,000 a year and over. To this | extent tax revision by the administra- tion plan does mean tax reduction and in an aggregate amount so large that no one concerned cares to put out es- timates. But beyond this point tax revision is to mean nothing but a still weight- ier burden upon the backs of others than the very rich. The surtax rate would be increased by his plan. Let- ter postage increased to 3 cents is an added tax to be borne by the great masses: of the people. Still higher taxes. on tobaeco fall the same way. A flat tax of $10 on automobiles, re- gardless of value or payer, would be for the high-priced machinesiand large for the low-priced. And finally, the plan embraces an up- ward tariff revision which means a large and general increase in taxes on the living needs of the people instead of on their wealth and ability to bear. Representative Garner, of Texas, declares that every one of Secretary Mellon’s proposals constitutes “a shifting of the tax burden from the classes to the masses.” It is not too strong a statement. They Should Pay. ¥rom the Port Allegheny Reporter. A United States. Senator junketing in Germany writes that the debts owed us by foreign governments are aral- yzing trade with this country. f that be the disease, it would seem that the logical remedy would be to pay up. Peerless Leaders. ¥rom the Utica Observer. Fordney is a confessed failure as a leader of the House Ways and Means committee, and Lodge is a notorious, failure as leader in the Senate. Mr. Harding has several jobs rolled up in one to take care of. Stitt —Get your job work done here. in his study shortly after 10 o'clock. Sun-. 3 day morning. His daughter in’ an adjoin- img room heard him fall and went to in- vestigate. Medical help was summoned, but found life extinct. Apoplexy was de- clared to be the cause. He was 66 years old. 5 —Relatives of John Buglonas, 50 years old, of North Scranton, who died at Hill- side Home last Thursday, fought so violent- ly over possession of the body that the po- lice were called-to quell a near riot. The former boarding mistress of Buglonas claimed the body, asserting she was a cousin. Buglonas’ sister had the body re- moved to her home, from which it was tak- en by an undertaker representing the cous- in, during which procedure blows were de- livered on all sides. — The reunion of the old canal boatmen which is to be held at Sunbury on August 27th, promises to be of unusual interest ' and will be attended by some 3000 mem- bers of the Association of Former ‘Canal Boatmen and a sprinkling of raftSmen. Lieutenant Governor Beidleman will deliv- er a modern; address, but the talks with charm will be the conversations of the old captains, their comparisons of notes and personal experiences along . the line of primitive navigation on the Susquehanna. -—(Coal of excellent quality, mined nearly half a century ago, is to be at once placed on the market at Pottsville, Schuylkill county. The culm banks are the richest in quality of any in that region and were the product of the old Gumboot colliery. When abandoned the colliery was operat- ed by King, Quinn, Ernst & Co. The banks contain more than 1,000,000 tons of coal. The Buck Run Coal company ‘has acquired control. "Phe Philadelphia and Reading Railway will begin laying tracks to the banks at once. —Burglars forced an entrance to the gen- eral store of G. S. Appleby at Hyde, Pa., on Saturday night by using a “jimmie” on the front door. They secured a large stock of eandy amd tobacco, with a few pennies that had been left in the cash reg- ister when it was balanced the previous night. The burglaes left a trail of candy from the store to the farm house of D. C. Grove, several miles distant, where a pair of bycicles were stolen on which they made their get-away. Phe officers are on the still hunt for a pair of eelored men seen loiter- ing about the store. —Ray L. Riley, vice president and gen- eral manager of the Valley Iron Works, Incorporated, Williamsport, is going with a party of Pittsburgh men to northern British Columbia, where they will hunt big game during August and September. They will go to Vancouver and thence by boat to Wrangell, Adaska. At Wrangell they will transfer to a powerboat, in which they will travel 150 miles up the Stikene river to the poimt where they will gecure guides, horses, food and other additional equip- ment, after which they will move into the mountains of northern British Columbia. —_ Lansdale borough council “swiped” about $3000 frem the borough electric light department, paid some bills with it, and then announced that, so far as work- ing capital was concerned, the treasury was “busted.” It seems that when a check was received recently by the electric light department, which is conducted by the borough, the amount was, through an er- ror, placed to the borough account. In a scramble for money to pay current bills, the borough depleted its working capital, and the light plant money was’ part of that drawn. The boreugh has dug up $8000 and the light plant will get its money back. SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE. ~~