Ihe @ DISTRICT AND COUNTY OFFIOKRS Congress, Hon Jno. PATTON, State Senator, Hon, W, W. Berra, Clearfield Beprosoutatives, Hou, J, A, Woonwanp, Hon, L. Ruoxx, Pr sident Judge t9th Dist, Centre and NMuntingden Hon, A. O. Funsr, Rellafonte Amociate Judges, Hon, O. Musson Hou, Dantes Ruoans, Conaty Commimioners, J¥o. 0. HEXDERSON, dno. D, Dresex, M.D. Frviex, Qommissioners’ Olerk, MATTRRN, Sheriff, Ron's C 0K, Jn. Deputy Sheriff, R. K. WiLsox, Prothonotary, L. A. SCHAEFrER, Tromsarer, Cryuvs Goss, information on hand that was worth more than his capiure. There is lit tle doubt that nearly two mi'lions of the secarities stolen from the Manha'- tan Bauk sere eveuntually recovered through Red Leary, and also tie se curities of the bank awsNorthampton, Old John Lord's stolen bond's $250, and numerous other recoveries well known 10 the police. Red Leary gol as fricudiy a greeting from the police had been a New York alderman. Iu- spector Burns Bub never failed to pass a pleassut good- or Pinkerton Register and Clerk Orphans’ Court, Jxo A, ¥ order, Peristin Recorder Ini Hanren Dep yr 1) Re Dlatrict Attorney, J O, Miran Coroner, Dr. HL. K. Hoy Uonnty Detective, Cap't A. MoLLEN, LOG Ks, ael'sfonte Lodge No, 208 A, V. M,, meets on Tues: | ay ! kht on or before avery full moon. Belie o Ohapter No, 241, meets on the frst Fri Ay night of every month, Donstans Commandery No. 33 K.T,, on the second widay night of every mouth Centre Lodge No 158, 1. 0. 0. F. meet avery Thurs fay evening at 7 o'clock at 1. 0. 0, F. Hall, opposite Sush House. Bellefonte Encampment No, snd fourth Mondays of each = posite the Bush House. Bellefonte Council No. 21, + of U. A.M. meets every Toewday evening in Bush Arcade, Logan Branch Connell No, Lil, Junior Order U. A M. mests every Friday evening, Bellefonte Cunclave No 111, 1 O. I. meats in Har ris’ New Building the second sad fourth Friday ove ning of each month, Bellefonte Pencibles Oo, “B.” 6th Reg. N. 6. P meets in Armory Hall every Friday evening. 72, meets the second sath in the Hall op- -. CHURCHES, Presbyterian, Howard street. Rev. Wm. Laurie | Pastor Services every Sunday at 10-8304. . sud 7 » | a. Sanday School (Chapel) at 230 ». wm. Prayer Meeting (Chapel) Wednesday at 7-30», 8. M. BE Church, Howard and Spring Streets, Rev. D . Monroe, Pastor, Bervices every Sunday at 10.30 4, wand Te wm. Sanday School at 2-30 r. um. Prayer Meeting [Wedoesday at 7-30 ». w, 8¢ John's Protestant Episcopal Church, Lamb sad Allegheny streets, Rev. J. Owwald Davis, Rector. | Services avery Sunday ot 1830 A. vw. and Te x | Prayer Meeting Wednesday and Friday evenings. 8¢t. John's Roman Catholic, Bast Bi hop Street, Rov P. MeArdle Pastor. Mas at 6 and services 18930 4. w, and Trom Reformed, Linn and Spring streets, Rev. W. HH Bayder Pastor, Services ov: ry Sunday at 10.30 4, wu ond? pM, Sanday Scheel at 2-30 r. Mm. Prayer | Meeting Wednesday evening at 7-30, ; Lutheran, Bast igh street, Rev, Chas. T. Steck, Pastor Bervices every Sundsy at 10.30 4. Mand Tp, ®. Sunday School ot 290 pr. x. 1-30 Wednesday evening. United Brethern, High snd Thomas Streets, Rev Wertman, Pastor. Bervices every other Sunday af | 1030s. mw. and 7 rv... Sanday School at 9 4. uw. Pray. ti Mosting Wednesday at 7-30». w. A.M. E Church, West High Street, Rov « Pastor. Services every Sunday morning and evening Y.M C A, Bpring and High Streets. General Mestingand Services Sunday at 4 # nu. Library and ng Room open from § 4. %. to 10 ». u, daily i Proayer Meoting at | Norris, | J THE END OF RED ' EARY. | The Record of a Celebrated Thief A Man Connected with some Famon® Crimes —Mr. Swimms Bitter Ex- perience with a Grass Widow. It was a notable gathering around John Lears’s coffin, before they “Dore | their aeguaintance, |b mse on Nortou's Point at Coney result was that a adopted the same 3 seemed feel quite prouti ol His Ways LO sporting Island was the resort, wot only of most of the first class crooks in the | country, but swell politicinns, prizes | fighters, brokers from Wall street aad fast young men about town, might be seen night aft+r night hobnobbing in front of the bar, and every man felt while he was in Red's place his per son and property were gvery much safer than they would be in a more pretenti us hotel. He adopted the rule so long in vogue at Harry Hill's —=*No stealin’ inside this ere "ouse:" Hall hexperts will be eld accountable for the same, an’ don’t ye forgit it.” fome of the experts did forget it and violated this rule. Did Harry Hill hand them over to the police ? Not a bit of it; the next time they called at his house he invited them into a back and there he w nt at them with a club, and the room, man's watch or pocketbook was safer in Harry Hill's than it would be in a church | Young M.n's Christian Associ. | woman drops out of sight, lation, Of late years Red Leary |Some times that is the last of them, | or a rule, and his bar. [It was suspected by many | of his old pals that he purchesed |*oD of a wea'thy gentleman, 3 : : R pera : his immunity from punishment by |€0ing to be married to one of the | most beautiful and amiable young furnishing information to the police (and this fact possibly may have led to his death. He was followed to his grave by men of his own class’ his wife, Red Kate, the sharer of his de«perate life, being the only one who could really be called a mourner. The arrest in Brooklyn of aprom inent real estate man named Swimm on Tuesday last is the culmination of one of the quaint little romances i 000 worth, came from the same sourees, superintendents and detectives as if he | day when they med aud Raed Licary al- | no | | drunken men could be fleeced at|One of these sad events occurred | | last week. his mortal remains to Calvary ceme of our city life. Mr. Swimm is an try. But though he was murdered | eminently respectable citizen ap- while drank by a fellow thief, he did | parently retiring in his ways, rather pot die with us the benefit of the |clergical in his appearance, and is clergy for in his last moments a priest in fact regarded as owe of the was called in, snd bell, book snd candle gave him a good send off to | “(hat bourne from vbence even no crook returns.” He had not thought | much of priest or prayers for the last | thirty-five years. Red Leary, as he was known among his pals and to the | police, was a daring thief at ten; he | had done the state service before be | was twenty; at thirty he was associat I ed with the m wt accomplished back | burglars and eracksmen in the coun- | try, the proceeds of several of their | ventures resulting in the aggregate to millions of dollars. Twelve or four. | teen years ago he kept a den on Chat bam Square, where countrymen were taken in and done for; a mysterious | disappearance was traced to his place which was eventually raided by the police and Red Leary was driven out. Bhortly after he got into an alterca- tion with another thief in a cellar on Bleecker street. It was asserted on | the trial that the thief drew his pistol | on Leary, whether he did or whether be did not, the result was the same, for when the smoke cleared away the other thief lay stretched upon the floor stone dead, and Leary stood with his smoking pistol in his hand with- out a scratch. Red was accquitted, the Judge declaring that the only drawback to the affair was that both | of them were not killed. The robbery of the bank at Northampton, Mass, where $720,000 in cash and scourities were bagged, wore supposed to be one of his exploits and the robbery of the Muohatban Savings Bank ‘n open day ight of nearly three millions was wel of the heaviest pulls on record. The man was a paradox; he never pretended to be other than he was and though well known to every officer and detective in the counlry as the adviser and companion of the most noted bank thieves and borglars, they never seemed to get him, In the slang of the crooks, “dead to rights,” or if stanchest pillars of the Baptist | there must be a little of Old Al m left in Brother standing his conversion church to which he belongs. S Swimm, noiwith- a d his ig ) thought he would have a little quiet lark, so he put an advertisement in the paper for a housekeeper, and as he advertisod him elf as a gen he years, for a few months tleman of means, he did not w nt a wrinkled old tabby, but a nice, bright, plump, vivacious intelligent accommodating housekeeper; in short just the right kind of heuse- keeper; for a handsome gentle- man of means. It is hardly neces- sary to say that he got a bushel and a half of letters, and one hun- dred and seventy-three photographs. Now Mr. Swimm dida’t want any housekeeper hehad an excellent one housekeeper in Mrs, Swimm, an esti- mable lady, who had daroed his stock- ings and faithfully attended to the duties of Swimm's household for over thirty years. Bat on the receipt of his mail Swimm looked over the letters sod photos, and finally picked upon an angelic widow in New Haven to presid + as the housekeeper of his mythical house. Donniag his Bun. day sait be kissed Mrs. Swimm good bye, and told ber he was going to Jook he had his eye. Now if Mr. Swimm have boen nearer the truth, but he did not. Well Mr, Bwimm hurried np to New Haveo and met the charm- ing widow add wonderful to relate, she was exactly like her photo, bu: then she wasn’t exactly a widow; she was only constructively a widow, that is to say a widow of the grass variety That was just the kiod of housekeeper that Mr. Swimm was looking for; she suited him to a dot, sod by way of binding the bargain, he took her down to Black Rock, on a ten-cent excur’ they did he always had some valoable sion, and there they had Bock beer, fried clams, devilad lohstars, ice oream, and a jolly good time in gen- eral, Bo fur all was plain sailing bit Mr. Swimm had hardly ieached hi® hotel his head swimmiog with ecsuncy a his prospective bliss with his new { housekeeper when a kuock came at | the door and a gentleman walked in who ealled himself Mr. Sibley, and desired to inquire of Mr. Bwimm what tin Jerusalem be had been doing with his wife? Perhaps Mr Swimm thou ght this was Mr. Bibley's ghost, at any rate the next day he got up and dust- ed for Brooklyn, He told Mrs, ‘Swimm that he had coscluded pot to | made a H. had | hardly got seated behind his desk, invest in that propetty, and straight bolt for his office, { when the grass widow Sibley stood in A the Mhe door with blood in her eye. gave the gentleman of means to un- verstand that while it was an easy | matter to catch a grass widow, it was not quitegso easy to get rid of her, and in ber particular case it would require guilders to doit. Mr. Bibley’s con- stitution was so badly shattered by Mr. Swimm's indelicale attentions to his wife, that it required at least teu thousand dollars to put him in a passable repair, The suit was to have come off last week, but it was under: stood to have been settled ont of court for Swimm failed 10 ma |terialize. But though Mr. Sibley's | honor was satisfied, Mrs. Sibley’s was not, and this week she had him ar | vestea for libel, and if she suceceds | she may convince old Mr Swimm that widows are dangerous things | to fool, grass or no gra:s. Occasionally we get very much | excited over the sudden and terious mys disappearances. A man or and and then agdin, sometimes it ain't Was | . . . ladies in the city. The affair was laid out to be very swell, indeed ning the presents came pouring in; The church was decked with flow ers. Oae of the toniest clergymen the in the city was engaged to tie nuptial knot. their intimate the n arly one half of friends were left out in Everything was ready. a with orange flowers- was crowoed but the bride. gr om came Dot, messengers dream of beauty, were detectives scoured the dives, but to no purpose; no fellow could find dot Colorado. Alter 1 COme " weary seat er ran across him in the street in a very dazed condition, suffering his father savs “from mental abber- [hat's not what they used ation.’ will da Theyjtook the young man home and put him to bed, and if they k ep everything excitigg away f.om him except a plentiful supply of cold water, I should not wonder if he might recover from his men- tal abberation. : Another wonderful disappearance took place in the person of a coun. try editor tripping in New York, for as a general thing they are gen. tlemen of sound morals and general information, and about as fly on all snbjects of ins and outs of ciiy life as the bunco men them. selves. 5 Well this particular editor came to town twelve hundred dol- lars in his pocket to boy some new presses for bis office. He parted with a friend at the ferry, and “hey presto fly I" he disappeared as if the earth had swallowed him. His fath. er and a delegation of country had said personal property, it would | neighbors came post haste to the ] ! side down and inside out, looking for this country editor. The morgue as searched, the river dragged, and all sorte of uncomplimentary aritcles apcared in the rural press as to the her to which the coun- i try editors were exposed in visiting New York. After weeks of con- stant anxiety and tireless search he turns up in Denver, Colorado, mi- nus his twelve hundred donais, and suffering from a bad case of “men- ta) abberation.” Mental abberation Gazelle, Mr. Clarence Cook, the | all through the afiernoon and eve: | Fifteen hundred in- | vitations were issued, and even then | cold. | The bride, | sent into the highways and byways, | out whether he had gone to King- | SO | to call it when I was a boy, but iti good | is an awfu! bad thing. Toke my advice and don't try it - Bedford Broker Hatceh’s Patal Fall. ioned peakroof Louse that stands on the southeast Twentieth street and Sixth avenue was the scene of a singular tragedy in the early hours of this morning. As told by the saryivors of the queer tragedy enacted there nnder of wight, | the story rans briefly as fullows: Na thaniel W. Hatch a Wall street broker and a member of the firm of WT. Hateh & Sons, of No 14 Nassau streer, Mrs Lillian Schofield, a lady customer with corner of cover having had a late supper with {whom ha had dae business at his «f. fice during the day, escorted her | home accepted an invitation to enter {and was surprised by the husband, to | {avoid whom he locked himself tn a | bath-room, Iu an sppearent attempt [40 escape he jumped or fell off a ones story extension that runs under vath-room windows and was killed His fate was not known until in the morning, when workmen entering the yard found his body at the foot of a tree, among ita dead and broken branches that had fallen with him. His skull was crushed. So far as the story of the Schofields went, enugh ruspicion attached to it in the opinion of the police and the Coroner to de- wand the arrest of the husband and the wife, The theory advanced to justify the arrest was that there had been a fight between the husband and the broker, sod that the Ia ter had been thrown from the extension. Mr. Hatch was 43 years old, aad in business sith his father and broth er. He was a married man, and lived { with bie family at No. 36 West Fifiy {third street. | Mrs. Schofield is the wife of Charles | W_ Schofield, formerly President of | the Montgomery aud Florida Railroad, of | leisure, said tobe on the point of em- | barking or to have recenily embarked {in some electric light business. He is a very small man, and said to be of a Mrs. Schofield is | lnrge sod, fine-looking and very in. {telligent. She speaks calmly of her | friend's death as “a very sad affair.” | According to her story she had long been dabbling in socks in Wall { street, usually through the office of W. T. Hatch & Sons (she carried any | number of stock certificates on her | person to prove it), though she oc- {and more recently a gent eman | quiet disposition. | easionally patronized I. & 8. Worm. Broad Also, | according to her statement, when she {did this she was in the habit of telling [her friend Mr. Nathaniel W. Hatch { ner, of No. 15 slreet, | what the Wormsers bought and sold, {nod what they gave her in the way of | advice. One of these occasions ocour- | ed yesterday, preceeding the brokers a: _. | violent death b fi hours. The h of three days, his fath- | oient des y a lew ou ¢ linterval the two spent together in {wocial intercourse and pleasant chat | turned partly on business and partly on pleasure and rivate affairs. | The Bchofields were examined by | the Coroner this afierocon sod their | story agreed with that told by them i | this morning. As-it was apparent that | | Hatch’s death had been caused by a» | fall sustained while trying to escape, | the Schofields were released from ar | rest. i si— WP AI—— Intlana Whits Caps. The sentencing of the Missouri Bald- Knobbere in Southwestern Missouri oalls attention to another organization with somewhat similar organizetion in {Indiana called “White Caps.” who flourish in a number of counties in | Southern Indiana. The objects of the { two organizations differ somewhat. The jobject of the Bald Knobbers was to | drive out new seltlors who oome into | the country, while that of the While Capt ls to see that po lasy, worthless, thieving people are allowed to remain in the country. Mr. L. E. Drake, the Southern travel, {ing agent of the Missouri Pacific Rail- {way as Louisville, was telling some { of his friengs what be knew about the after a little bit of real estate on which | city and the town was turned wp: | yw ie Gupa <I0ish ploline drganizs. | tion and bes. existed for a number of | years in Southern Indiana, [It is based largely on the old Ku-Klug plan. and ane of the first privciples of the order is ta,allow: 60 hogroes ts why in the | Territory goverend by itp While there fire, there are thourands of negroes around the section of Indisna where the White Caps operate, and thousands of them farther South in pKentucky, not & negro is to be found Among the White Cups, and not a negro who knows anything about them could be ' induced to go where they are. OBIRCTE OF THRE WHITE CAPS. The negroes having been driven out of their section of the country, the Niw York, May 8. —The old fash- Loe | | White Caps net ns vigilantes, exsctly | an the vigilantes act in the far West when such oommitices exist, Their so'f constituted mis on is to discipline Should the owners of any of trinkets now endeavor 12 this» ® OUT them they can only doo by purchining them wi the coming sele {unruly and worth ess wombers of the | { community, Their power is slmolute | because they are apparently merciless | : {and their operations are conducted | with perfect secrecy, Not a word is ever heard as to who tand, nor as to when and | will strike next. A wan could go and live nmong the peop e who must cor s tue the White C word of up of local men, and not =» ever beard ns to the indentity to dis- of his one eonnected™ith them, nor as their operations. When a man is ¢ipiived be says nothils g or fear i § Ie snd skips oul, For the most part the action of the White Cape 18 pot governed at sil by private d ike Or preciunice, but Lor the public good, When a man proves | himself tobe worthless and won't work; drinks {and il! treats his family, or if he is sus- or under when he to excess babitually | pected of being » bad character to | be a thief, or if 8 woman comes the same condemnation the man or the woman comes - under the came con- demnation the man oz the woman is sure to by visited by the White Caps, {and if one does not heed the warding {one will have cause to remember that he or she did not, LEAVE, Warniog is always given, WARNINGS TO the { method of giving it is peculiar. When a man bes ecme under the White Cap | condemnation he will ied some morn- ling a little sprig or branch cut from a | tree lying on his doorstep. The sprig | is large enough and it is placed «ith { cure enough to ley the owner know that itswas put there some other way (ban and This is the first warning If ithe man contitues by the wind, and means go at ogee. warping is not heeded aod the {in his ways he is sent a note telling him that the must leave ot ones by order of White If the ing is not heeded the time the CUnpe warn for scion hes now srrived, The White Caps at uo one apparently knows some Lime and place, where or when, have arranged their plane and meet st somelappointed place at a cer- be ready for of the offender, take him out and give him =a tain time masked 20 35 not Lo recs ognizable and armed and business, They go fo be home whipping, the lash being laid on with strong arms sod io a way that leads the victim to wish that he had never known Southern Indiana, After the number | of lashes agreed upon have been Ihnid on the victim is released under promire | to leave the country, If he still per- | sists he will be found some morning hanging to the limb of a tree. Killing bowever, it unnecessary ss the whip- ping always accomplishes the object, that the de- known the As a matter of fact, now termination of the men is warniog is sufficiens: When a man is told to go in the customary way he stays | not on the order of his going, but he goes, SECRET AND POWERFUL While the White Caps are at work, | a'though it may be known thst they! | will visit a town or that | warned a vieiim, Leey are pover molest. (ed, and vo obe ever knows anything | about them: It has come to be recog” gized that «tis not safe for worthless characters to fool sround where the | White Caps are. Even the law seems | to be powerless to prevent their opers- tions, as it is impossible to secure evi- | dence, Either the people are restrain- ed by connection with the organization, or by fear of it. would dare to wait to testify in court as he would probably be unable to answer when he was call. ed. The public seotiment favors it, several attempts have been made to have the orgavization brought up in | court, but without success. Until some great outrage occurs committed by them to arouse the people against them ad in Southwest Missouri, the orgenine- tion will continue, —— A A———— a Relics of the War. For more than a week a commission of Treasury officials has been occupied fo appraising and catslogfig an inter- esting collection of eaptured and aban- doned property which bas Iain in the vaults of the Treasury Department since 1808. In the collection are gold and silver watches, finger rings, pins, and other smaller articles taken from sion soldiers and captured Cone federate Ihe commision has finishe ed its labors and wll commence to ade vertise the articles prior to their sale by suction. For (wenly years these personal 1a ve rested, dust 1 he is nama of the des partment, neatly boxed and guarded from prying eyes by the official seal of the Secretary of the Treasury. Two yours ago Congress passed an aot su- thorizging the delivery to the owners, or their legal heirs, of such articles, where the proof of ownership should be satis- factory to the Secretary of the Treasury and providing that every hing remain- ing unclaimed altor the expiration of two years should be sold at avelion. dead 1 ath enver constitue the | where they | Jr, Bs the organization must be made | is | nny | { the seryice the name of Sport's of they bave | APART OF THE PROPERTY, Everything of this ch racter eaptur- | ed during the war was promptly for- | warded to Wash ngton, with sn official | dereription of the property snd the circumstances under which it came in- 10 possession ol the wil ary su horities | The «ffivnl ncoounts Bre necessarily concise and worded in the most simple language, but ther« are doubtiess stories connected with many of these prizes One of them is worth tell ny. On March E V peymasier atinched to the 2, 1865 Preston, n Army of the Was [§] Fenpessen, rar stilted to ngten '} wel With noe small brid 7 Hants oF { ile , and 8 duwmwond ri 1g, hay ng centre an ineraid round with 4 eleven s re 1 He iry Sport, » Connecticut sutstitute, Preston's official letter accompanying de not Lhe jewelry briefly reads - Sport serted January 16. 1865, snd has There is no further record in the archieves of the been heard from since.” Treasury or War Deparument of Henry offi dal ex-soldier, Sport. However, u veteran of the War Depsriment, un ravels the mystery connecting Sport apd his dinmonds Sport, whom | knew well, once told me the story of those trinkets said he 10 a correspondent, “He came from a little town io Ewtérn Connecticut, the name of which | bave long since forgot- ten, Ile was the only son of a widowed mother in humble circumstances, and a wild fellow. His cousin, » strugg ing young farmer, was engaged 10 a beauti- ful girl, daughter of a wesal'hy manpu- fucturer, who insisted that before theiy marriage her busband should be able to provide a home for his wife, When | it became necessary to draft men into 1% n was one of the first the dreaded list. FTORY OF HENRY If he obeyed the drawn upon EPFORT. summons he saw his long absence from home would mesn = to his soon providing a comfortable bome for his promised wife. Being a brave fellow he did not relish the idea of a substi- tute, nor d'd he have the ready means ruin staring bim in the face, snd death blow cherished hope of to procure one who was determined that he should not go to the war, found a way out of the dilem- Recretly she went to Sport and with the jewels her dead mother had bepueathed her bribed him to offer him. soif as a substitute for her lover, exactly ing a promise that the latter should be told nothing of the means she had used to effect the The next day the young farmer was overjoyed at re- ceivittg & visit irom Sport who offered to shoulder a musket in his place upon the single condition that during his ab- sence his cousin should keep a watch ful eye upon his mother's comfort. A few days later the recruiting officer left the town with Sport snd his compan- ions. Through the long marches and many privations Sport carried these jewels | always cherishing the idea of some day returaing thei to their owner. Final- ly be deposited them with the paymas- ter for safekeeping, and while they were in that wiicer's custody be desert’ ed. I have never known why he took this rash step. He probably chafed under the resirasints of army dscipline, I never heard from him afterward, and have always supposed that, like many another misguiied man, be died in the attempt to make bis way through the lines. Insny event be forfeited the last chance to restore these diamonds to his cousin's bride, and they will now pass into the hands of strangers. His sweotheart, however, on, transfer, An Albezy Sensation, Arsaxy, N. Y,, May 10.—-Amcs H. Tyler, of Bath-on-Hudson, a salesman, shot and fatally wounded Dr. W. F. Gilroy, a dentist, this morning. Tyler went to Gilroy's house, and upon ihe Iatter’s appearance began shooting at him. Three balls entered Gilroy's body and although badly wounded he started and ran. Tyler followed but was caughy and arrested, He claimed that Gilroy who was married only a few weeks ago, is father of an illegitim ste child of his 17-year-old daughter. His daughter, on what will be her dying bed, told him to shoot Gilroy. He did eo. Gil roy Is » soclety man and his pewls. wedded wife is highly connected. ———— WA Whitley, the notorious outlaw and teala robber, who with Jobn Barbour is suspected of ibe murder of Deputy Sherift Stanley, wer capluscd sfter a hard fight. Two deputy Sheriffs met Whitley sud Barbour on the rod ten miles north of Libertyvil'e, Texas. Barbrur put spurs te his horse ned made his escape, but Whitley dronping him- self on the s'de of his horse, fired at the officers from ander his neok. The fice was returned, Whitley's horse being killed and Whitley badly wounded. There is a reward of $1,500 for the oap- ture of each of theses dosp rads,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers