entre Lemocr KAGHIK AND WATSON APPEAR IN COURT At The Habeas Corpus Hearing Held Last week AWAITING THE COURT'S DECREE A The Substance of the Testimony Briefly Told in a Few Words--Mystery Still Surrounds the Case--Was Kachik Murdered?--Opinions Differ. afternoon the court house was crowded with an anxious lot of peo- ple assembled to hear the testimo would offered at the habeas hearing 3 Kachik anc Watson, charged with the mu John Kachik, at Cl are * the 12--a full accor Saturday be be an tWO 1 mere HLly DIACK eye at this t them Next we find that at the hotel of Geo. Kachik, at Clarence, | the Munday evenin i murder occurre arrelli : : + ANG apart again a th o 4 in the barron on suppose ' were i Slavish tongue a was tt } were toid t drew you Ing at dre of the wot giver ng under oe for fo WAS sum moned to Clarence to care the body of John Kachik which was k. The head ira ead here w struck by the ed 197, the body in adirty y careful r Neff was i examina at the made n not oe le of the throat, that none was there the to dis first whi undertaker was 1 at the the wound at neck h he as about 2 inches deep from inser knife blade, The wound was ly made by a sharp instrument as a knife a half inch long and one fourth wide, on the right side of the the collar ine and extended downward and backward severing the right exterior and anterior jugular veins and lodged against the 4th vertebrae, The wound would cause the death ina very few minutes from inter nal hemorrhages. Drs, Seibert and Fish. er could not determine whether wound was made before or after death, or stiletto, was about neck, above { dead man's « ny that | } these two men met | the with Andrew Kachik in a ) ] tt having offer their an ana w case with ti useld 1e; 1 rested partic there 0 had been comn y intimated that the 1 could have been made in the ur 1 Ossma Was aking establishment of sured him severely for lothes examination o« , he argued deed ere Was n FARMER'S INSTITUTES. 1-2 5 Pleasant Gap--Feb FATUR BAY We NING, Pine Grove M w A s--Feb 4 MOORS Milesh rg, Feb, 5-8 AVITEAN BRDAY BYERNING Musie Fehoes Fro mm the Care of Ornaments The Farmer's Daughter Mr Education Prof. H. KE. VasuNorman Alt the e« 1 vited to attend and particularly ladies and farmers and admission (ree hough th tit lucation of farmers. yet all all of The door members organizations will Come and help be wide open Mra, Henry Gentzel, of Pleasant Gap, isseriously ill, She recently nursed her { husband through an attack of typhoid as the chemicals used in embalming the | fever, and being constantly at his bed body affected the tissues, John Bauer, a detective, testified that | side it proved too moch for her system { She caught cold which developed [ate Harry Watson told him that he had slept | pneumonia, BELLEFONTE, PA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 24,1807. ZEN FIRES | SOME HOT SHOT An Exaggerated Criticism of Country | School Teachers. | A PENSION UNCONSTITUTIONAL HOT CIT! come a d a be, will be left to shift strict of Fic ity chat fairly f . will become a at half pay or inp Pauper Shame to cation of for «a certain receive money wl after his POT 1 Ler i id good compe good comi o) ine any k retirement | al teacher would live The State Cannot Grant One Class of | Special Favors--Some Criticisms--Hunters License--Will Citizens Cause Trouble Ort, to the apprecial Ll} Teachers’ | be on AC wit the our LE - w ing mercury k 1" rough twenty h our whiskers, below zero horse and feed cattle, water the Fork Del * rosewood chairs another $4 oo Carnegie JOO, 00 Hl he benefit of 1 to the cot - n while en CArTY A farms to the and nese statesmen f wd us to on our own : all these go lignity of ommonwealth roat row of hen the back woods wi wish to share loot th the big ng too much, and {ON exITAVA of the peopl . 4 ht school, and | get too old to begoming a pau my fellow some rural i} pension A Hor Cirizen wi are a me Lo ci ha funds never intend WOM nak cit ens teach school in hopes of getting Editor Centar Democrar, After paper rendhing the articles in your had expressed the proposed I believe the mute nearly than the where citizens Yieews f Tend article of De 20, "wr er a and against Pension act, to be the sentiment of two articles of January 10, should a teacher, who has taught school for thirty years, be more entitled toa pension than a man who follows some other vocation for a living and hax vio! Taft by a competency? Further, PER 4 the pension amount to, to the tui the rural district. Why, he the people Why | as do the ¢ have so mu {lives it with the money f style: durix of & or goes 1 0 some and when the fall te opens he find | quite a few bills draw his has it ear chanic spend tt : f «4 ana Vi a manual laborer’ 1} ¢ teacher minds the farn and fe the the state AE Lhe ) Bard to eachers desire Seder und in fa “1f teachers ret In Waras of yaldn’t oO ¥ POOITIE deserve nsions, so do mechani misters of the all other per mon i great He 1 are CUERRATY al a ine RARE y BOCHTY of $1 he State of wii kinds abound RODUA or be hable ) A Cavy Pennsylvania has vast forests and | lands where game of all Itisa a dise, and will remain so if we only en force the present game law. 1 believe the Creator gave the woodland and the streams, Hilled with animal, fowl and fish, for enjoyment of mankind, There fore any legislation that places any burdensome restrictions upon one class of Bupters, nothing more Qa wrong --and unjust always defeat the purpose for which they are intend ed. What | mean by this is: For the propagation of all kinds of game, there be limited for hunting and fishing but those periods should free every Cilizen of the common wealth, rich and poor alike. As wild fowls, the and other game, are the provisions of the Crealor to mandkind, it is unjust to say to the poor man (who can't affurd to pay) you must secure a license before you hunt-and if he cant pay the fee, this pleasure of a day in the woods will be denied him here are poor families, so unfortunate {ly situated, that need every dollar that can be earned. Possibly ove day in the season such a poor man might find a day for enjoyment in the woods, but vould ill afford to pay money for such a license. Should he have several sons, much less would be the opportunity for the buys to participate in the chase rismans para is than IAWS showid SCARONS be to fish, | Just this position, and sheh a law would prove an injustice, It would deny them “ privilege enjoyed for conturies, ass this law, what will be the result? Deny the poor man the opportunity to i ———— ARCHER an— There are hundreds of poor families in | PENNS CREEK WILL BE HARNESSED Dams to be Constructed Generating Power MEANS A LARGE EXPENDITURE Large for Capitalists from Other Places Insterest- edin the Project- Company Was Granted Charter--Few Details Have Been Announced a al A charter for this enterp 5 1arn ed over a year ago at / b few gave it any serians thongirt er-the time, It is supposed that thé promoters of the sar ofr : H a Mr. and Mrs. F. S.'Ray Safe. Several weeks ago Fre Ray HBrockerhoff House, Bellefonte has iriends here, was marrie in tooua. He and his bride after wedding started on their honeymoon tr for the island of Jamaica, and were the when the earthquake took place in wh thousands of people were killed and in jured. The parents of the bride and groom were considerably alarmed as to their safety. But their fears were set at rest Saturday when they received wor that Mr. and Mrs. Ray are en route New York on the big battleship Indiana The news came through a wireless message from Admiral Evans, who nam ed the people he had on board his ship and that they would be landed in New York Al ths to the | Peter Rider Getting Tired Pete Rider, who is behind t bars charged with killing Clyde Auman, is geting very uneasy and tired of his home on the hill, He told some of his riends who went to see him this week that he didn't like it up there and was going to see whether Be could not be taken some other jail. It is not known whether he doesn't like the prison fare, whether he is getting tired of his company, We feel certain however that Sheriff Kline is doing all in his part to make Peter feel comfort. ably and easy while he is under his care, Mrs Rider, his wife, was to see him on Friday and on her departure | both seemed to be very mach affected, ~ to or The State College Lutheran church was presented with a handsome individ. ual communion service by Mr, and Mrs. C. H. Seibert Vol. 20. No.4 FACT, FUN AND FANCY. 3right, Sparkling Paragraphs--Selected and Original, " ram MT sburger Killed by Electric Shock. Guy Art of Milesi an 0wn the track, ar until there was that wk the e lava slag mh and th or in _all direction large heavy iron kettle was en he preces being red feet away J jured with who troyed. some of t we hund body was in of One CX% but IS Was a w the or two were si Ne] HAT kettle It is sa the men who had urned escape for 10 Chia Philip B. Crider's Will, The will « Crider ABUATY TOLD, atl the lied home of W. Crider, on Lino 3 if the late Philip B who d son, F b street Bellefonte, was admitted to probate on Thursday, [anuary 17 The will was a very leagtny document and only the interesting parts were taken down He to each of his grand children; Fuarit Cruler, Cathrine Shutt and Blanch Crider. the sum of $e.000 To Joseph Crider, his brother, he left “The William Crider Homestead," in Gallagher town. ship, Clinton Co., consisting of 100 acres more or less. F. W. Coder his son was to receive the balance of the estate. He was also appointed execulor of the estate, I'ne will was made oa the 11th day Ja nary 15¢9 A Railroad for Clearfisld County, A charter was issued by the state de- | partment to the Paulipsourg Rulroad |eompany, to build eighteen miles of line | in Clearfield county between Chester | Hill and Jayneswil i Capital $250,000, | Yavin L. Krebs, of Clearfield, 1s presi ent, nis leavis
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