itl Broce | INK SLINGS. —Everybody but the death angel ~ seems to take Labor day off. —And another life had to be snuffed | - out to make a holiday for the Labor day crowd at Altoona. —Most of the coal barons of the period, 1916 to 1921, might more aptly be called coal barrens today. —The last song anybody thought of singing last Saturday, Sunday or . Monday was “Keep the Home Fires Burning.” — Now we're sure the kids of today are different from those of yesterday. On Tuesday we saw hordes of them going back to school with smiles on their faces. : —Epinard, the French colt, lost his first race on American soil, but he made a better showing against Wise " Counsellor than Georges Carpentier _ did against Jack Dempsey. —The annual bathing beauty con- test is on at Atlantic City and four- teen men *will decide which one of the eighty-three girls looks best to them —from the ground up, of course. — While we know there are lots of - things that Dave Windsor may do that the Prince of Wales would never be permitted to essay, the Prince can tumble off a horse any old time and Dave hasn’t done it once. — Already a lot of people are get- ting excited about getting out the vote. We own a modicum of interest in that movement, but we have little stomach for the one of getting out the snow shovel that will follow all too soon. —Two and one-half billion cakes of soap will be used in the United States this year. That’s about twenty-three cakes for every man, woman and child, or two cakes apiece a month. Some use more than their quota and others douse themselves with cheap perfum- ery. —The police chief of Joplin, Mo., hid behind a barn while one of his of- ficers was having a gun battle with a bandit, preferring, of course, to be a live coward than a dead hero. At that, we think he exercised bad judg- ment. As a live coward he’ll have to hunt another job; something a dead hero doesn’t have to worry about. —Sen sen! Whoever sniffs it to- day? Time was when the kids who had been smoking against parental admonition resorted to it to kill the cigarette breath. And their elders who had sneaked a tabooed libation chewed it with the same deceptive in- “tent. Today the kids smoke with im- FAL ity and the man who gets an old- mer. —Only two persons were present at Grant's tomb in New York, Sunday afternoon, for the thirty-ninth memor- jal service in memory of the former warrior and President. They were the speaker for the ceremony and a newspaper reporter. Waiving discur- sive lament as to the evanescence of fame we merely want to note the fact that it made little difference to the General whether two or a million were there. —1In the language of Jerry Dono- van, the real reason there would be no “politicians day at the Granger's picnic was because there was nothing the Republicans could say.” It ap- pears, however, that they must have dug up some bunk to try on the far- mers for they had a meeting there yesterday afternoon. Just what ex planation they had for the present plight of agriculture we haven't been able to find out. —1It is not so long a look into 1925 that we can’t already see a very pret- ty judicial fight in the offing. A year or more ago we went crystal gazing and saw a field of seven who might be casting covetous eyes at the judi- cial ermine that fell on the shoulders of Henry C. Quigley nine years ago. Since that time the light has grown stronger and the shadows of Messrs. Furst, Fleming, Gettig and Zerby have disappeared; leaving only the Judge and Messrs. Keller, Spangler and Johnston still discernible as potential possibilities. Two on the Republican side and two on ours. We think we quite safe in saying that this will be the final line up for the primaries. We could tell now, al- most to a certainty, what the line up for the election will be if we were sure that Providence hasn’t other plans for some of the aspirants in the mean- while. —The American round-the-world fliers completed their circumnaviga- tion of the globe by air on Sunday. Magellan did the trick by sea in 1509. It took him five months to do it, just two longer than Mr. Vernes set for the trip some years ago and a num- ber less than Nellie Bly required when she was in the lime-light as a globe trotter, but quite a record making pilgrimage at that. When you stop to think that they flew nearly thirty- thousand miles with the same engi- neers and the same firemen in the cock-pits and with the same planes you've got to admit that it was some achievement. As it takes six engines and six crews to get a Pennsylvania train from New York to Chicago in a day, and that-is only five hundred miles, and God knows how many en- .gines and one crew, if it sticks, to get a Bellefonte Central train from Belle- fonte to State College in a day, and that is only twenty miles, you will understand better what Smith and Nelson and their two mechanicians have done. Eng if ry. so proud of it that it’s | Rs aL pai _ | disguise, they were prave men, march- STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. VOL. 69. Mr. Davis’ Labor Day Speech. The Labor day speech of John W. Davis, delivered at Wheeling, West Virginia, ought to reassure every man and woman in the country dependent upon wages earned, that the Demo- cratic candidate for President is both safe and sane. His statements are so clear, his attitude so plain and his purposes so beneficent that “he who runs may read.” He recalls the better statesmanship of the past. He seems to combine the practical efficiency of Revival of a False Promise. In a speech at Lincoln, Nebraska, the other day, Charles G. Dawes cast an enticing lure to the farmers of the middie west. He told them that their suffering had caused great pain to himself and his associates in the Re- publican machine, and that a remedy for the evils will be searched for and found. “We will summon the best minds of the country” to tackle and solve the problems, he declared, and the farmers will be made “to flourish Grover Cleveland and the splendid idealism of Woodrow Wilson. It | ought to be a pleasure as well as a duty for every voter, influenced by | conscience and patriotism, to support | with earnestness and energy such a candidate for President. The speech was not even remotely a political address. It was the enuncia- tion of a great lawyer and experienced statesman on a subject of profound | public interest. The relations be-. tween capital and labor and between employer and employee are of great . concern not only to the parties them- selves but to all others, and not gen- erally understood. In his speech Mr. Davis makes the definition and dis- tinction clear. Child labor is impossi- ble, he declared. “To stunt the growth of a child in his most critical years; to rob him of his opportunity for edu- cation and to make him a juvenile drudge for mere purposes of profit, is a crime against the future of the race,” is his appraisement of child la- bor. Mr. Davis favors full liberty of con- tract individually or collectively and the right to strike without fear of in- junctions in the absence of such con- tract. He believes in arbitration mu- tually agreed upon but not compulso- That would strangle. liberty which is a sacred right. “I prefer lib- erty with all its perils, including the : liberty to make mistakes,” he added, ! “to any system by which the govern- ment seeks to set itself up as the uni- versal shepherd of us all.” Educa- tion: is the key to’ opportunity and peace the pathway: to prosperity. In lead toward peace. ——Now that Germany has an American manager it may be hoped that she will settle those little bills which have been giving recent trou- bles. Harvest of a Slovenly Sowing. The Klan riot in Herrin, Illinois, on Friday, was a speedy fruitage of Gen- eral Dawes’ recent approval of a for- mer outbreak there by the hooded or- ganization. In a speech delivered at Augusta, Maine, on August 23rd, Charles G. Dawes, Republican candi- date for Vice President, speaking of the Klan, said: “A thousand mem- bers of the Ku Klux Klan, without ed to the office of the sheriff of Wil- liamson county to protest against the lawlessness in that section. If a se- cret organization to uphold law and order is justifiable anywhere it was justifiable there.” The lawlessness referred to was the warfare between the coal miners and strike breakers at Herrin. Republican candidate Dawes spoke in answer to John W. Davis’ unquali- fied denunciation of the Klan in a speech at Sea Girt, New Jersey, the day before. Mr. Dawes felt it would be in the interest of his party to con- cur in the retrobation of the Klan but wise to qualify the action by a word of praise of the organization. The number of voters who perpetuate crimes under. the false pretense of en- forcing law is a matter of conjecture. If they are as strong as they claim, they are a potent force in politics, and candidate Dawes imagined he could “hunt with the hounds and run with the: hare,” by denouncing the organ- ization in one sentence and commend- ing it in another, in the same speech. - The fresh outbreak on Saturday this belief he calls upon the laboring | inspires anythi plea: those upon whom the burdens of war | and ‘the farmers are conspicuous. in fall with most crushing weight” to that class. It also recalled thoug! ing. like a green bay tree.” This sounded fine to the ears of the hopeful agri- culturists until they got to thinking of past promises under similar cir- cumstances. The late President Harding was the originator of the | phrase and the memory of it is not pleasing. During the campaign of 1920 Mr. Harding embellished most of his “front porch” speeches with assuranc- es that in the event of his election “the best minds of the country” would be summoned to the seat of govern- ment to work out the interests of the people. In pursuance of this prom- ise Albert B. Fall, of New Mexico; Harry M. Daugherty, of Ohio, and Ed- win Denby, of Michigan, were called to the cabinet. Fall is now practic- ally a fugitive from justice, Daugh- erty was driven out of the public service in disgrace and Denby resign- ed to save himself from impeachment. Andy Mellon, Secretary of the Treas- ury, is still in position to help the rich because of an affliction which checked a Congressional inquiry into his official activitiés. Then there were Charles Morse, now under indictment, at the head of the Veterans’ Bureau, and A. D. Lasker, now returned to obscurity, who was head of the Shipping Board, both ac- tive in looting operations. These were the “best minds of the country” four years ago and the employment of the phrase by Mr. Dawes brought their records into view and caused consternation among the farmers, who the Vice Presidential candidate was striving to Blesse. The phrase of the false promises made to farmers in that memorable campaign of false pretense and was anything but pleas- ——The Prince of Wales is doing fine. In a golf game the other day he uttered a cuss word on missing a stroke. But he wasn’t qualifying for a golf team. He was simply adapting himself to his environment. Automobile Accidents in Pennsylvania The State Highway Department has compiled some statistics of accidents on the highways and city streets of the State which are both interesting and suggestive. The report published covers the casualties of June ard July and show that “accidents are chiefly the result of carelessness ‘on the part of operators.” It may be added that most of the fatalities are drivers not responsible for the acci- dents. Drunken drivers are the most prolific causes of automobile accidents but a good many are due to weakness of mentality. Some cars are driven .over the highways at high speed by men hardly qualified mentally to push a baby coach in a “one way traffic” street. ; . In June of this year thirty-eight persons were killed and 1448 injured in 1320 accidents. During July sixty- one persons were killed and 2614 in- jured in 1373 accidents. Of the whole number of accidents in July thirty- seven were caused by drunken drivers and in June thirty-three were ascrib- able to the same cause. The most surprising feature of the report is that a considerable proportion of the accidents on highways occurred on straight stretches of road and are the result of drivers running around oth- er ears going in the same direction. There are drivers who “like beggars on horseback” lose all sense of reason was a logical result of the experiment. In the pervious encounter one of the men ‘were subsequently indicted for his murder. On Saturday the case was dismissed by order of the district attorney, and when the sheriff at- tempted to seize an automobile which had been used by a bootlegger, a member of the Klan, firing began and six persons were killed and a number wounded in the encounter. The Na- tional Guard was promptly summoned and it is hoped further fighting will be averted. But the six deaths and the five crippled citizens is the har- vest of the Hell-an’-Maria’s slovenly tongue in an effort to gain votes. ——1In the face of his attitude dur- ing the world war Mr. LaFollette shows a strong nerve in appealing for support on patriotic grounds. ———President Coolidge is trying to match platitudes and promises against Mr. Davis’ strong arguments, officials of the Klan was killed and two | and responsibility the moment they get their hands on the wheel. : "Any one out for a drive on a Sun- day afternoon in the neighborhood of large towns or cities may wonder that so few accidents occur rather than so many. A great number of automo- biles are in commission and quite a number of drivers are careless. And this will continue to be the case until the courts set their heads to checking the evil. Drunken drivers ought to be eliminated, and they can be if they are sufficiently punished for accidents they cause. It would be severe to say , that a drunken driver is as dangerous as a murderer for none of them has murder in his heart. But as a matter | of fact he is a greater menace for he may cause the death of many by a single act. | | ~——Singularly enough the Republi- ! can machine has been able to get Sen- ator LaFollette’s support whenever it needed it if LaFollette needed some- thing at the same time. i try can be herded and voted ini 4 solid Wise Policy for Democrats. It is plainly the interest of Demo- crats of Pennsylvania to concentrate their efforts in the pending campaign upon candidates for Congress, Sena- tors and Representatives in the Gener- al Assembly and local offices. There is no chance to carry the Democratic electors in this State and the pros- pects are bright for a gain of four or five Congressmen and an increase of the party strength in both branches of the Legislature. LaFollette is likely to get the electors in Pennsylvania as Roosevelt did in 1912. But that re- sult will not impair the chances of the election of John W. Davis. His vic- tory is practically assured. The election of Mr. Davis will be a great triumph of civic progress but its value will be impaired if we fail to secure a majority in Congress to support his policies. The Republican machine is committed to the purposes expressed in the Mellon tax bill and the present tariff law. Both of these are in the interest of special privilege and the price of campaign contribu- tions. If upon assuming the duties of President John W. Davis is supported by a majority in Congress the lobby- ists and looters will be forced to seamper as they did after the inau- guration of Woodrow Wilson in 1913. It is a cheerful prospect to contem- plate. According to the best information obtainable the LaFollette party will support Frank C. Sites in the Nine- teenth district; Herbert W. Cummins in the Sixteenth district and Warren Worth Bailey in the Twentieth dis- trict, the Democratic nominees for Congress. There are many reasons why they should support and earnest- ly strive to elect Edward S. Benson, the Democratic candidate in this dis- trict. He is progressive in every re- spect and will stand firmly and val- iantly for the interests of the people as against special privilege for the few. If the Democrats of the district are awake to their opportunities Mr. Benson will be elected. block. He invited a few labor organ- ization officials, who are also govern- ment officials, to the White House on Labor day to hear his views on labor. Historic Cross to be Dedicated at Boalsburg. Tomorrow a simple ceremony - will be performed at the Boal camp at BELLEFONTE, PA.. SEPTEMBER 5. 1924. NO. 35. | 01d Employees at Scotia Hold Reunion 7) Boalsburg by:the Officer’s club of the 28th Division, which will be fraught with much historic significance. The ‘officials of the village of Mt. Blainville, France, have sent to Col. Theodore Davis Boal the wayside cross from the Argonne in front of which General Edward Sigerfoos was standing when he was mortally wounded. Gen. Sigerfoos had just taken command of the 56th Brig. of the 28th Division and was the only General Officer lost on the field of bat- tle by the American-forces during the ‘war, : The planting of this little French cross on American soil and its dedi- cation to the memory of a distinguish- ed American officer will be a very im- pressive service to those who are thoughtful of its real significance. Immediately following the dedica- tion of the cross a memorial service will be held for Gen. Asher Miner, who died at his home at Wilkes-Bar- re on Tuesday night. Quite a number of Bellefonte and Centre county sol- diers of the world war not only train- ed under Gen. Miner at Camp Han- cock but also served under him in France and many of them will go to Boalsburg for the memorial services tomorrow. : ——What a wonderful opportunity the management of the Grange en- campment and fair at Centre Hall overlooked. They should have induc- ed the Prince of Wales to give them one day of his time and Grange park would have been thronged with vis- itors beyond its ample capacity. ——The combined ages of the thir- ty-three veterans of the Civil war who gathered at Grange park, on Wednes- day, for their annual reunion is 2673 years, or an average of 81 years. The three oldest totaled 263 years or an average of nearly 88 years. rm —— A —————— ——1If there had been common hon- esty in the government during the past three years there wouldn’t be so much need for common sense now. ce ———————— i —————— ——The ratification of the Dawes plan has revived speculation in Ger- man bonds but it must accomplish something more to be worth while. ——General Dawes says that “the farmers’ problem has worked out its own solution.” This will be fine if the farmers find it out. : sm—— ly ————— 3 —]f you want the latest and best | news, read the “Watchman.” Thirty-five years ago Scotia, up in the Barrens opposite Stormstown, was the seat of one of the largest iron ore operations in Centre county and a thriving village of industrious work- men and their families. Thirteen years ago operations there ceased for good, the property was sold, buildings and machinery moved away and all that now remains are four houses and the old Methodist church. . Recently two dozen of the old em- ployees decided to hold a reunion and invitations were sent far and wide with the result that one thousand or more people gathered at the old park, close to where the village stood, last Saturday, the date of the gathering. Most of them appeared with well la- den baskets and the few who did not were cheerfully invited to share the many good things to eat taken by others. Among the crowd were men and women who had not been back in forty years. The frost of time had ripened many heads so that introduc- tions were necessary. ao Following the dinner B. H. Parsons, of State College, called the crowd to order and introduced Rev. Rumley, who gave a nice talk in which he stated that he was unacquainted with the history of Scotia but had always heard that the inhabitants were a happy, law-abiding people. Other ad- dresses were made by Witmer Harris, an old employee but now of Pitcairn, and J. Laird Holmes, of State Col- lege. A permanent reunion was form- ed by electing as an executive com- mittee W. H. Ghaner, of Scotia; W. G. Murtorff, of State College; Alda Stuart, of Altoona; Mrs. Ella Ghaner, of Scotia, and H. B. Lykens, of Port Matilda. : The State College band was on the ground all day and furnished an abundance of good music. People were in attendance from Pittsburgh, Altoona, Bellwood, Tyrone, Wiliams- port, Jersey Shore and Trenton, N. J. W. H. Farber, of State College, who was an engineer at Scotia for thi years and lived in the same hous gether on the front porch of the old house, ‘which is one of thé four still remaining, and had a group picture taken. : - ’ i More About Trees. Editor “Watchman.” Let me say something more about trees. The State Forestry Department, which costs more than ever, has issued a pamphlet showing in detail that dur- ing eleven years, 232,877 acres of tim- ber have been burned down, the num- ber last year being 5774 acres. An analysis of the causes of this waste of trees shows that the main fire-setters are the railroads, fishers and hunters. Some years ago, when. Mr. Dixon rep- resented Elk county in the Legisla- ture, he introduced a bill requiring the railway companies to police their lines and put out the fires that they set. | It also changed the judge-made law in Pennsylvania on the burden of proof., Of course, the bill could not pass a corporation owned Legislature. Another prolific cause of fires is-the recklessness of sporting people who hurl their cigarette stumps into the dry leaves, while hunting. There is no use in brying to appeal to these men to extinguish their paper covered fire brands, The nature of the flavor- ed “smokes” is such that the origin of judgment is etherized and a condition of neuritis exists there when not fur- ther complicated by the invented drinks of a maudlin prohibition age. God save the trees! Man will not! Let us turn to a more saccharine theme. The same department reports the product of the maple trees of Pennsylvania, last year to have been 339,700 pounds of sugar and 500,000 gallons ofg syrup, valued at $512,000. The maple sugar industry is in its most flourishing' condition in Somerset, Erie, Potter and Bradford counties. Its discovery is traced to pre-revolu- tionary time, when Pennsylvania was largely populated from the Palatinate regions on the Rhine. Those early Germanic settlers, finding the maple sap could be utilized for sugar and syrup, hewed out of wood, receptacles called sugar troughs. They made “spouts” of common elder, wrich were inserted in the trunk of the lordly maple. After a good run of sap, an ox team, with a wood-boat and -a bar- rel was taken around through the woods and the sap was thus gathered at the place where it was boiled down and jugged, if molasses, and cakes, if sugar. This industry was common 80 years ago in all these central counties of the State, settled by the Palatin- ates. In those dark and dismal days of |. fire and murder, 1778 and '9, when Bastard Brant and his Indians and Governor Johnston’s tories ravaged. the settlements at Wyoming, Wil- liamsport and Fort Freeland, near Milton, it is related a heroic mother, who fled from the savages, hid her youngest child beneath a sugar trough and made her escape into the wilder- ness. . The maple is not only useful for its sweetness, but it is a beautiful shade tree and valuable for domestic arts. “Woodman spare that tree!” . . gio W. R. BIERLY. Get your job werk done Here. to. the institution from —State foresters are trying to find out who is using the Humboldt forest fire tow- found in the cabin with food and water. —The forest map of the State being made by the Department of Forests and Waters, is reported as ninety per ceat. completed and plans are being made for a stream map. : . —REdgar R. Kiess, of Williamsport, member of Congress from the Sixteenth Pennsylvania district, was reappointed a trustee of The Pennsylvania State College by Governor Pinchot, on Saturday. —Three bandits attempted to rob the of- fice of the Independent Oil company, at Huntingdon early on Saturday. They fir- ed two shots at Edward Hileman, super- intendent. Hileman returned the fire and one of the robbers fell wounded. The oth- ers carried their comrade to a waiting car and escaped. 3 —When the power at the E. J. Schenck furniture factory in Allentown suddenly stopped on Saturday morning an investiga« tion was made, and Elias J. Frederick, aged 74 years, the engineer was found dead beside the boilers. He had succumb- ed to an attack of heart disease, superin- duced, it is believed, by the heat. —The Rev. Edward Brewer, 49 years eld, pastor of the Stottsville colored Baptist church, near Coatesville, was shot and kill- ed on Tuesday when he was mistaken for ~ ground-hog by a fellow hunter, Ulysses Denmark, also of Stottsvillee = Coroner Bunting, of Oxford, investigated the shoot- ing and declared it to have been accidental. —Giving his cigarettes to a little girl to hold while he took his first swim in eight years, William H. Strusser, 33 years old, of Reading, failed to come to the surface after his initial dive into the P. & R. res- ervoir, opposite the round house on North Sixth street, Monday afternoon. His body was found imbedded in the muddy bot- tom. —Plans for a parade of Ku Klux Klans- men in Pittsbungh on September 24th have been abandoned; Sam D. Rich, king klea« gle of Pennsylvania, declared on Tuesday, because of the police insistence that the marchers appear without their regalia. Mayor William A. Magee last week grant- ed a permit for the parade upon condition that the regalia be omitted. . —Accused of smuggling small steel saws to a prisoner in the western penitentiary at Pittsburgh, and planning for the deliv- Lery of guns to other prisoners, Harry W. Holtgraver, Jr., a guard at the prison was arrested early last Friday when he report- ed for duty. Gertrude Perry and P. H. Holtgraver, also were arrested and are He- ing held as material witnesses. —The Mifflin county treasury was en- riched to the extent of $1,000 on Monday when Prothonotary Stewart M. Peters turned over to R. E. Hanawalt, county treasurer, that sum as cash bail forfeited by John W. Cotner, of Sunbury, who failed to appear for jury trial at court last week, on the charge of transporting fifty barrels of beer from Sunbury to Lewistown. —Believed to be an escaped inmate from the Danville hospital for the insane, ‘a | youth, said to be William McMillan, aged 19 years, was taken into custody at Scran- six ‘weeks ago. He was apprehended when he attempted to attack a playground offi- cial in South Scranton. —Pedestrians in the business section of York were surprised and amused one day last week when a well dressed woman, stockingless, wearing a fur neckpiece, pa- raded the streets. When traffic officer Cramer approached her and asked why she was not fully dressed, the woman replied she was only following the style in the larger cities. She was ordered by officers to return to her home and put on stock- ings. She did. —An innocent, but rather inquisitive bumblebee climbed the leg of Miss Eliza- beth Widener, of Youngstown, Ohio, as she was endeavoring to drive her car past a truck last Thursday on the Lincoln high- way near Whitford, Chester county. When it reached her knee it stung her and the car dashed into an embankment and was badly wrecked. Miss Widener’s hand was badly lacerated and a Downingtown phy- sician placed several wounds. A companion in the machine was uninjured. : —George Oakley, “Human Fly,” of Pas- adena, Cal, died at Wilkes-Barre on Sun- day as the result of injuries he received in ‘a fall from the fourth story of a bank building on Saturday night. Oakley had climbed up the outside of the building, steadying himself by clinging with a cane to an automobile inner tube which his wife held down to him from the windows above. The tube broke and Oakley plung- ed to the sidewalk, narrowly missing spectators. Oakley formerly lived in Wilkes-Barre, Pa. : : —The State Department of Agriculture, which raised a hullabaloo several months ago about cleaning up gambling and im- moral midway attractions at country fairs, passes the buck back to the communities in which the fairs are held, in a letter from Secretary Frank P. Willits to the district attorneys and sheriffs of the various coun- ties. Secretary Willits declares the de- partment will insist that the fairs be held in the proper surroundings, or no State aid will be forthcoming, but the law en-’ forcement work must be done by the coun- ty and local law officers. : —Believed a homeless laborer, John Ry- an, forty years old, found dead in a bunk house at the Bear Valley Water compa- ny's dam, at Shamokin on Saturday, was worth approximately $11,000, according to Dr. J. K. Fisher, county coroner. A long abrasion on his right side indicated foul play. Fellow-laborers said he got up to get a drink in the night and fell. An in- quest was held. His money consists of $10,000 in the Farmers’ National bank, of Kansas City, $500 in the Kulpmont Nation- al bank, his last month’s pay check of $100, and $55 found in his pockets. —Mrs. ‘Alice Cramer, wife of William C. Cramer, of York, Pa., told Alderman Kath- erine Bentzel, that although she brought suit against her husband for assault and battery, surety of the peace and non- maintenance, she is willing to overlook ‘everything and live with him if that is possible to do, And this notwithstanding the fact that she asserts he beat her, punched her in the stomach, punched her in the ribs, threw her on the floor, kicked her, threw a mailet ‘through the screen door at her, shook her and made her arms black and blue, made her get out of bed when she was sick, and that he has not supported. her for five years, and that he is angry because she will not work to sup~ . pert him, rs” SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE er as a dog pen. Twice dogs have been ton, on Tuesday, by the local police. It is stitches in the ~~ A,