INK SLINGS. os —A cloudy sky is all that saved us from a frost Wednesday morning. ~ ——As a rule those who go aftsr “them get more things of value than sthose who wait. : ——Wheat has dropped in price to ‘$1.40. Last week local mills were “paying $1.50 for it. ——The Philadelphia primary elec- tion was a scandalous affair but the people of that city will ratify it by the usual majority. -——According to a recent survey “made by the State Agricultural De- partment Centre county has 3595 sheep on its various farms. ——1In view of the evidence thus far obtained it will be a hard job to fasten the blame for the Shenandoah «disaster on Commander Lansdowne. ——Some charitable people imag- “ine they have done their share toward -a good cause when they ask their -neighbors to subscribe to the fund. ——Some of the bureaucrats who are now pounding Colonel Mitchell may be getting rich selling his forth- coming book on a commission basis. —Say what yeu will about former «Governor John K. Tener’s attempt to set the political stage for a “comeback” ‘The Pennsylvania State College has “reason to remember with gratitude the unexpected friendliness of his ad- ‘ministration toward that institution. —DMuch as we admire John S. Fish- ‘er, of Indiana county, we are inclined fo the belief that he will be a far hap- pier man if he persuades his friends . that they had better abandon hope of making him Governor of Pennsylva- nia, at least until the P. R. R. and the N. Y. C. make their interests mutual in this State. —Governor Pinchot can bawl his "head off about the Welfare Depart- ments’ being divorced from politics, but if it were to develop the greatest expert known his head would be off in less time than it takes to tell it if he took the slightest exception to any of the ideas that are rattling around in “the Giffordian head. —It isn’t always the most exper- denced and profound lawyer who makes the best Judge. We once thought it was. That’s why we so strenuously fought the election of the late Judge Quigley, ten years ago. His record on the bench showed us how groundless was the argument we had used in opposition to his election. —God forgive us. We didn’t know “what we were doing to Hardman P. ‘Harris when we suggested that he would be a good man to elect as bur- .gess. Already we have heard the la- - dies planning enough troubles for the - prospective “chief potentate to drive him to putting himself on “the cooling .board” before he has served three months. —The dinner that the Williamsport ~Chamber of Commerce tendered Gov- ernor Pinchot on the occasion of his visit to Lycoming county on Tuesday threatened to be a “frost” until ~enough anti-Pinchoists could be per- suaded that it is better, sometimes, to dine on crow than affront the man who ladles out the soup for local institu- tions and State roads. —Gasoline is selling at fourteen cents in Oklahoma. The last we “bought cost twenty-two. What the Harrisburg Telegraph calls a robber - held up a filling station in that city on Wednesday and got away with twen- ty-one dollars. Did the real robber . get away or is he mulling around on - some of the estates assessed in the name of John D. Rockerfeller? —What do the political crooks of . Philadelphia have to fear as a result «of their scandalous action in the re- cent primaries.” Eighty per cent. of “the voters down there whe are now rolling their eyes and throwing up “their hands in righteous (?) indigna- tion will step up to the polls in No- ‘vember and vote to further prostitute -the judiciary so that they may be “{reated with leniency. —We’ve abandoned the “Afalet- “ics.” We gazed in the crystal for hours, but couldn’t see them parading under the American League pennant. We didn’t believe the crystal was as dependable as our own ivory. Now we “know better. “teacher and “the crystal” tells us that “State is going to beat Pitt in their first meet on the new Pitt stadium :and we believe “the crystal.” —We know enough about Mr. Walk- er’s reputation as a practitioner to guarantee every one that when he gets to be Judge of the courts of Cen- tre county all legal procedure will be right up to the minute. His motto has always been “never let the sun set on an unfinished job.” He is -anathema to dilatory lawyers, but for the same reason he will be a great worry and expense saver to those who have business in the courts. —Gossip, conjecture, speculation to the contrary notwithstanding, Judge Dale is put and he’s going “to stay put.” He will not side-step the call of his Prohibition friends. He is going to lead their fight for the bench and that means that brother Keller's .short, fat legs are going to have some ‘job keeping up with the more lengthy and attenuated members ‘that furnish motive power for his two rivals for ‘the honor. Mr. Keller'has much pow- er in low, but he’s in a race with two candidates who are in the habit of stepping on the gas when they start «doing things. 70. VOL. “Satan Rebuking Sin.” In a speech delivered at Carlisle the “gang politics is always at its worst in the big cities. No where could you find a more perfect example of this truth than what happened in Phila- | the order General Hinds, command- { mors to that © delphia on Tuesday. It was nothing !ing the Eighth Corps area of the ar- ! political circles f to the gang that Judge Renshaw had won the respect and confidence of the whole city. It was nothing to them that his record was of upright fear- BELLEF STATE RIGHTS AN Quick Vengeance on Mitchell. | The vengeance of the bureaucrats other day Governor Pinchot said, has been prompt in pursuing Colonel whose : Mitchell for exposing their delinquen- cies. i He has been deposed from ac- tive duty in the service. In issuing ; my, has given no reason, but it is pre- ‘sumed that insubordination is the ! charge. Colonel Mitchell revealed | facts which reflected upon the intelli- D FEDERAL UNION. Tener’s Hat in the Ring. Former Governor John K. Tener, ONTE, PA.. SEPTEMBER 25. 1925. NO. 38. Mr. Keller is Grateful. During the course of a recent con- present home is Charleroi, has versation with Harry Keller Esq., the announced that he is a candidate for | Republican nominee for Judge of the the Republican nomination for that of- ' courts of our county, we discovered fice next year. little attention was paid to them. His | announcement, made in Philadelphia, There had been ru- !that he is immensely gratified with ffect floating about in the result of the recent primaries. or some time but as Mr. Keller expressed his gratitude to ‘he has not been a conspicuous figure , the voters of his party in the follow- “in the political gossip of recent years, ' ing language: “I want to avail myself of this op- | portunity and privilege to say that I lessness and even-handed impartiality. ' gence and patriotism of his superior He refused to take orders from the | officers, and that has been appraised gang. Therefore the gang laid its un- | as “detrimental to the service.” His clean hands on the judiciary and raid- | obvious purpose was to improve the ed the court to drive from office an service and there are many reasons honest and competent official and re- ' to believe that his exposures will ul- place him with an order-taking fol- timately have that effect. But under lower of the machine.” ' the system a subordinate has no right on Sunday, removes all doubts on the ! appreciate greatly every vote cast for subject. His hat is in the ring and for | me at the primary election on Sep- the present at least, he has the field | tember 156th. I am naturally very : i . | much gratified in being chosen as the to himself. There will be other ean | nominee of the Republican party for didates, of course, but if there is any | the high and responsible office of virtue in the adage that “the early | Judge of Centre county. It was par- bird catches the worm” he has some- | ticularly pleasing to me that my home thing on his competitors. town, where I have always lived, and Every word of this arraignment of the Vare machine shamefully true. The Municipal court of Philadelphia has been from its cre- is literally and to suggest improvements. The air service of the army and na- ‘vy has been either a ghastly tragedy ‘or a cruel joke. Colonel Mitchell, who In his announcement the ex-Gover- i | where so many persons know me best, nor declares that he has not “become gave me such a flattering vote of con- a candidate at the behest of or to |fidence and endorsement. But most serve any man or set of men or any | Pleasing of all to me is the fact that is an expert air man, discerned the ation a prolific fountain of corrupt pa- tronage. Thus far, however, it has not yielded to the pernicious power of the Vare family. After the district attorney’s office had capitulated the contractor boss concluded to make a clean sweep by seizing the Municipal court and set up a machine candidate against the jurist in commission who stood between him and the coveted prize. To accomplish his purpose he had his criminal henchmen perpetrate the most glaring frauds both in the casting and return of the vote. But wicked as this outrage against the integrity of the primary is Gov- ernor Pinchot has no license to pro- test. Great as the crime against the people of Philadelphia and Pennsylva-, nia Gifford Pinchot is accessory. Two legislative sessions have been held since he became Governor. During the first session, owing to his skill in the use of patronage, he was able to get any legislation he wanted. He knew of the corrupt practices at elec- tions in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh because he had profited by it but he refused to even recommend legislation that would remedy the evil though im- portuned to do so by a large number of citizens who had supported him for : Governor, Before the : mbling of the Gen- eral Assembly‘of 1923 the late Sena- tor William Flinn, of Pittsburgh, had prepared a series of measures intend- ed to prevent electoral frauds or at least to minimize them. Senator Flinn knew that 50,000 or more fraud- ulent votes had been cast for Mr. Pin- chot in Philadelphia and 20,000 or up- ward in Pittsburgh. But he believed that notwithstanding this help to his ambition the Governor would be hon- est enough to guard against such frauds in the future. clude this legislation in his program for the session. But Gifford Pinchot refused to consider the subject. He repeatedly pleaded for prohibi- tion legislation; he continuously urged legislation that would multiply his power as executive; he frequently de- manded freak legislation of one sort or another but never opened his mouth to protest against debauching the bal- lot or wrote a line asking for legisla- tion to prevent a recurrence of the electoral crimes which had served his purpose in the past and might pro- mote his ambition in the future. “Good government in Philadelphia suffered a dangerous set-back” by the conduct and result of the primary election last week but the responsibil- ity rests quite as heavily on Gifford Pinchot as on Bill Vare, Each had his part in the scandal. A considerable number of the influential newspapers ; of the State urged the Governor to in- faults of the organization and wanted to correct them. In -pursuance of this purpose he told the truth, as he un- derstood it, to a Congressional com- mittee investigating the subject. For that he was demoted from the rank of Brigadier General to that of Colonel and admonished to say no more unless his opinions were approved by his su- perior officers. In the remote station to which he had been deported he kept silence until the costly tragedy of the Shenandoah aroused his emotions and he violated the orders. His practical dismissal from the army is the pen- alty. Napoleon invited suggestions from subordinates and rewarded them ac- cording to their value by promotions. His achievements have come down through the channels of history as ' marvels of military genius. The stock- broker at the head of our War Depart- { ment and the lawyer who controls our ' naval activities have a different idea ‘of the subject. They penalize sugges- tions for improvement before the val- ue of them has been measured. Pos- sibly a subservient Congress, influ- enced by the adroit use of patronage, will approve this policy but it is a safe conjecture that the American people “will not concur. Equal and exact jus- tice is an inherent principle of good citizenship, and Colonel Mitchell is en- titled to it. Foleitty et tte ee lee eee: ——The nomination of Henry C. ' Niles, for the office of Judge by the Democrats of York county, is an hon- or to the party, a service to the public and a just tribute to an eminent law- yer. te meer flee c— Max Leslie’s Surprising Defense. Senator Max Leslie’s “affidavit of ' defense” in the action to recover $75, 000 on notes due the Carnegie Trust i Company, of Pittsburgh, puts a new ‘face on the relations of John A. Bell to the politicians of Pittsburgh and other sections of the State. The gen- eral impression had been that Mr. Bell was the obliging “angel” for all the impecunious politicians. It was known that he “helped” a number of that type of citizens by advancing ‘money or credit for adventures in bus- "iness. It is generally understood that he had agreed to pay large sums for ‘an appointment to the office of United States Senator and gave freely to slush funds. i But Senator Max Leslie indicates that Mr. Bell was less the “angel” than the dependent of politicians. In other words he states under oath that (his notes held by the Carnegie Trust Company were not given in considera- | tion of money borrowed from the bank Experience is a great, —John T. Laurie, of Tyrone, is “but in consideration of friendship for evidently the champion economist in Mr. Bell. That is, he alleges that the political expenditures. He ran for notes are simply “accommodation” ev- borough council in one of the wards of A idences of debt given to the bank to Tyrone on the Republican ticket, was help Bell in a financial emergency and nominated and has already filed his ' that none of the proceeds of the trans- ' expense account which he gives as | action went to him but all to Bell. He four cents, two 2-cent postage stamps. | Protests, therefore, that the receivers ; of the bank have no claim on him. | The ways of the politicians are de- Mr. Walker Appreciates the Support vious and sometimes sinuous but it is He Received. In the course of an interview with W. Harrison Walker Esq., who has been given the Democratic nomination for Judge, he expressed himself as highly gratified with the honor con- ferred on him by his party. Mr. Walker is deeply sensitive to the responsibility that is his and has authorized us to say that he will make an intensive campaign for the office, being mindful always of the dignity that should characterize aspiration for such a position. He wishes to thank those who so loyally supported him and hopes that those who preferred others at the pri- maries will now find it desirable to rally to him as their party’s standara bearer. reef onsen. ——Nine times out of ten the things that are on sale at low prices are in communities a long way from where we live, . a safe guess that the defense of Sen- “ator Leslie threw a great surprise in- , to a vast majority of those who were familiar with the operations and ac- tivities of both gentlemen. If Mr. Leslie can establish his claim that Mr. Bell rather than himself got the mon- ey on the notes many other creditors ' {of the bank may set up the same de- fense and thus reduce the assets of ; the bankrupt bank to a shadow. Of { course Senator Leslie will have to ac- count for the worthless collateral he is said to have deposited with the { notes as security. | ——Aside from other considerations | | the Philadelphia board of registration 1 is somewhat to blame for the electoral ; frauds this year, and Pinchot appoint- | ed the registrars. ——It may be said that after a sin- gle woman passes the age of thirty she won't object to the “obey” or any ' other word in the marriage ceremony. and sultriest days of the summer sea- particular group or faction.” In view of recent and present political condi- tions this fact provokes considerable speculation. The Republican party is | so distinctly divided into factions that : € Judge it is difficult to imagine a man enter- . certainly want to be, parts of Centre county. i the nomination came to me ‘from not merely a few sections but from all This is in keeping with my conception of the re- sponsibilities of the office to which I aspire, for a should be, and 1 the Judge for ail ing a contest without the assured sup- | of the people of the county. That is port of one or another of these groups, i the type of Judge I want and expect to In 1910 Mr. Tener was the avowed '!© Pe if I am elected, and I expect to candidate of the late Senator Penrose, with the friendly interest of Senator ! Oliver, then the potent force in the ' western end of the State. That com- bination composed a formidable force. During his term of office he was not in cordial relations with the Vare con- tingent though Senator Ed. Vare in expressing disappointment at some action of the Governor declared that 40,000 fraudulent votes cast for him in South Philadelphia were responsi- | ble for his election. But the present head of the Vare clan doesn’t always , adhere to the traditions, as was shown by the recent alliance between Vare | “and Grundy, and it is not impossible | that the Philadelphia contractor boss is behind the ex-Governor. i be elected. At the recent primary election it was the privilege of all Republicans to aspire, for a Judge should be, and I ! right and proper that the members of | our party should have such an oppor- tunity for a free, open expression of their preference. My campaign for the nomination was conducted in the spirit of refraining from personalities of any kind. My campaign for the election will be conducted along ex- actly the same lines. Now that all Republicans have had the opportunity to express their choice, I appeal to not only those who voted for me, but to all who voted for my opponent, to ac- cept the decision of the majority and accord me their loyal, united support at the polls in November. I am placing my candidacy in the “Nobody hands of the people of Centre coun- knows where the hobo goes” and it is ' ty, because as I have stated, I want to just as difficult to follow the sinuous ' be the Judge for all of the people of movements of Republican politicians | the county, regardless of race, creed these days. Reed may have brought Tener out. | ——According to the Governor's es- Senators Pepper and or color.” Official Returns of ‘the Priaries. “1; The county commissioners, with timate of achievements he has not i Miss Marie Doll and Miss Rachel Lam- only cleared the political atmosphere | bert, as clerks, began computing the i but painted the sky blue during hig | administration. | Pinchot Makes a New Charge. In his speech at Lewisburg, on Mon- day evening, Governor Pinchot assert- "ed a new and somewhat serious charge ; against the , Pennsylvania. He stated that “in the old days bucket shops and stock swin- dlers cost the people of this Common- “wealth $100,000,000 and beacuse the political gang protected them they did it with impunity. Although in 1922 some of the largest stock swindling ' schemes blew up only one of the pro- moters went to jail and he was a little one.” This isa grave charge but ‘lacks definiteness. The Governor ought to have told who was responsi- - ble for the obvious failure of justice. | The Governor did go into details , somewhat. He said that a United States Senator and a member of the , President’s Cabinet had visited the bu- reau of securities and urged a conces- sion “to sell to the people of Pennsyl- vania $5,000,000 worth of stock in an alleged steel corporation in the mid- dle west. It was found to be worth $170,000 less than nothing. Investi- gation by the bureau of securities showed that most of the $5,000,000 out .of which it was proposed to defraud the public was to be divided among the promoters themselves.” The Unit- ed States Senator concerned in this transaction was from another State but the Cabinet member involved is not located. In thus protecting the “rubes” of Pennsylvania the bureau of securities of Pennsylvania has performed the service for which it was created. If the habit of the bureau has been to ac- cept bribes or grant concessions to swindlers through favoritism, the im- provement in morals and methods in- dicated in the Governor's statement is commendable. But the reform has not gone as far as it might or else the Bell bank scandals might have been averted. Still it is worth while that one bureau of the Department of Banking is alert and incorruptible. But the bureau was created before Gifford became Governor. ~——Sunday was one of the hottest son but the temperature dropped on Monday and Tuesday morning was down to thirty-nine, within one degree of the frost line. Of course there is little in the gardens or en the farms now for frost to kill. AA ter— lf ——"——————— ——Among the State Highway ap- pointments announced at Harrisburg, on Monday, was that of Harold R. | Republican machine of | voté cast at the primaries on Tuesday of last week on Friday afternoon and completed the job on Monday. While there were no important changes from the totals published in the “Watch- man” last week, we publish the total vote as a matter of record: DEMOCRATIC. Judge of the Superior Court: W. A. MeGuire..)\................, Judge of Common Pleas Court: J. Konnedy Johnston W. Harrison Walker. N. B. Spangler....... Arthur C. Dale District Attorney: W.Groh'Runkle...................; Jury Commissioner: Sessssessarsda BR A I John C. Conde..................... 3149 REPUBLICAN. Judge of the Superior Court: Albert Dutton McDade............. 1156 Jesse E. B. Cunningham........... 2588 James Regan Jr............iouu.iih 549 Judge of Common Pleas Court: Arthur C.aDale......0...000 000 on 2186 Harry Keller:..... i. vous viv iio 3462 District Attorney: John. @Q. Love, ............ i... iis 4606 Jury Commissioner; mre David Vaughn ........ seniassnnaee, 1000 Scott Holter D. W. Boyer J 910 John D. Decker.iii.ivivi.ii.ivoner 875 PROHIBITION. 3 Judge of Common Pleds Court: : Arthur C. Dale...... ddA Tidiviiiiig 105 W. Harrison Walker... 1 Harry Keller............. 5 J. Kennedy Johnston SPAWLS FROM THE KEYSTONE —Circulation of counterfeit $5 notes was discovered by Hazleton banks. —Miss Bertha Cornwell, of New York, has been selected as superintendent of the Lewistown hospital. ig y —Masked bandits: held the night watch- man of the Jewel Oil company’s service station at Mt. Carmel at the point of a gun while they helped themselves to forty-two dollars in the cash register.’ —Frank Ritchel, aged 22 years, a Sha- mokin, millionaire, cheated death by a few inches, at Sunbury, on Saturday. He drove his car over a grade crossing and a fast express took off the tail light. —Struck in the back of the neck by a piece of a circular saw which broke while he was operating it, Ralph Boyd, 28, "of Danville, was so badly injured that he died on the way to the hospital late on Monday. Boyd was employed in the carpentry de- partment of the Danville stove works. His mother and only child died within the last six weeks. —Thomas Lynch, a prisoner in the Ly- coming county jail, is earning money with which to employ special counsel by oper- ating a restaurant and laundry within the prison. He takes the orders of inmates who desire more varied meals than those on the regular jail menu and prepares them in his cell. In the evenings he wash- es clothes for several prisoners. —After serving a term in the Lancaster county jail for passing a bogus check, Da- vid Hinkle, wanted on three similar charges in York, was lodged in the York county jail last Thursday te await hear- ing before two local aldermen. He is al- leged to have given checks in order to raise money to buy a wedding ring and to pay for his wedding dinner at the Colum- bia hotel. —Calmly giving directions as to what hymns should be sung at his funeral, Wil- liam B. Aungst, aged 41 years, car repair- man at the Hollidaysburg shops of the Pennsylvania railroad, whose left leg was crushed and the left side of his face badly mangled after a shift engine ran into him while he was underneath a car, Friday afternoon; died on Sunday morning at 10:30 o'clock. —While his parents looked helplessly on, 17 year old ReRoy Thurau, of Oil City, was drowned in the Allegheny river at Walnut Bend at 10 o'clock Sunday morn- ing. While swimming in 18 feet of water he was seized with cramps. His cries for help brought his father and brother to the rescue in boats but they reached the spot after the youth had gone down for the third time. The body was recovered four hours later with the use of grappling hooks. —The Susquehanna county jail at Mont- rose was raided Saturday night by two state troopers and a constable in a search for liquor and beer. The troopers search- ed the cells of W. W. Walsh and M. J. Dempsey, Scranton brewers, who are serv- ing six months for Volstead law violations, but found nothing in them. In another cell the troopers said they found five bot- tles, one of which contained a table spoon- ful of fluid believed to be liquor, No ar- rests were made. —Criminal information against twenty- eight mutilators of monuments at the Get- tysburg battlefield, were filed with Feder- 1 Judge Albert W. Johnson, at Scranton, last Friday, by United States district at- torney Andrew B. Dunsmore. The alleged offenders live in scattered cities in Mary- land, Pennsylvania, New York and Rhode Island. The list also includes several res- idents of Washington, D. C. All of the Cost of Primary Election in Centre County. County Treasurer J. O. Heverly paid out to election officers in the six- ty-four voting precincts of Centre county, last week, the sum of $3,309.- 87, which was $144.71 less than the cost of the primaries in 1924. Elec- tion supplies this year cost $343.07, which was $63.50 less than last year. As all the bills for the printing of the ballots are not yet in it is not definite. ly known how this expense will com- pare with last year, when the bill was over $700. Lightning Knocked Horns off the Cow. George Reed, who lives on the old Markle property beyond the borough home, had his cow out in pasture last Friday. To keep her from wandering away he had her tied by a chain to a big stone. During the hard rain storm, last Friday morning, a bolt of lightning shivered the stone into hun- dreds of small pieces and knocked both horns off the cow. The cow, re- leased from her anchor, walked to the stable, a distance of about 150 feet, and dropped dead. ——The new Pine street bridge in Philipsburg, erected mainly through the efforts of the American Legion of that place, was formally opened to the Spicher, of Bellefonte, as a chainman. public on Monday evening. offenders will be asked to appear af the Qctober term of court, ie so if —Charged with taking money from ¢ &. D. packages, Carl A. Hiles, 32 years of age, Mount Union letter carrier, was held in $500 bond by Commissioner Samuel Lovin, at Harrisburg, on I'riday. Postoffice in- spector MacMing arrested Hiles several days ago and testified at the hearing that the man had taken about $48 from C O. D. packages. Hiles brought no defense. He was furnished bail by his father when it was decided that he should be held for United States district court, —After five month’s idleness, the facto- ry of the Penn Shirt company, at Altoo- na, which ceased operation last April, will reopen September 29. It id intended to start with a large working force. Louis Parish, of Saxton, a former resident of Al- toona, has purchased full interest in the company from Jacob Saltzman and Harris Dembert, who had operated the place for several years. A number of improvements have been made in the plant and new ma- chinery has been installed by the new owner, way ip di fe mid EE —Ralph Weieh, age $8 yeitrs, of Tock Haven, Was seriously burned on the body and limbs ‘Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock while engaged in opening a drum of acid at the plant of the American Ana- line Products, Inc., of which he is an em- ployee. He was burned on the entire back, neck and both arms and legs and about the right eye, when the cap flew off and the acid drenched him. He was removed im- mediately to the Lock Haven hospital where his burns were found to be of a ser- ious nature. Whether the sight of the burned eye is destroyed cannot be ascer- tained for a few days. —Mr. and Mrs. John Dry, of Spring township, Berks county, have brought suit against Dr. Gordon F. Borneman, a Boy- ertown dentist, for $5,222.10, because of the death of their son, Warren, 26 years of age. It is alleged that the son was treated by the defendant and that in the course of performing dental work on October 16, 1924, a “root file fell into his mouth and he swallowed it.” The instrument lodged in his intestines, an operation was necessary for its removal. The parents ask $5,000 for the loss of maintenance and support and $222.10 for funeral expenses. Another suit was filed by them against Dr. Borne- man for $929.54, for hospital bills and med- ical services arising out of the surgical op- eration. —Albert Kumites and Joseph Kosluaski, both aged 28 years, of Beaver township, Columbia county, were committed to ithe county jail at Bloomsburg, on Sunday, after they had been identified by Millville residents as two of the trio who on Sep- tember 11 were foiled in an attempt to hold up the First National bank in that town. The car used by the bandits was also recovered on Sunday, being found hid- den in the brush along Black Run. The police are hopeful of arresting the third member of the party soon. The men have been suspected of a number of crimes in the last two years, and it is just possible that they were implicated in the robbery of the C. Y. Wagner Co. mill in Bellefonte, a job pulled off on the night of September ~. 10th.