PAGE SIX THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1913. NATIONS TO UNITE IN PERRY TRIBUTE Will Galsbrate Centenary of Battle of Lake Erie. PRESIDENT WILL SPEAK. Put-in-Bay, O., to Ba Scene of Cele bration a Hundred Years After Bat tle, Marking Century of Peace Be tween English Speaking Peoples. Taft to Be Orator of the Day. The Perry's! victory centennial com mission, whoso headquarters arc at Cleveland, O., have Just announced the program for the exercises at Put-iu-B'ay, Ohio, Sept 10 and 11. This cele bration will bo international in its scope, as It. will commemorate the equal valor and heroism of the sailors of both iloots participating In the bat tle of Lake' Erie, which was fought on Sept 10, 1813, and also the fact that this battle marked the end of naval warfare on the great lakes and was a herald of the century of peace between the English speaking peoples that ,wlll have ensued since the signing of the treaty of Ghent, Dec. 21, 1814. Delegations consisting of the gover nors and their staffs, state officials, members ofaho United States senate and house of representatives and other distinguished citizens from the ten Btates participating in this centennial will be present Ten States Represented. These states are Rhode Island, which was the birthplace of Commodore Per ry; Kentucky, which furnished many of the members of his crew and 75 per cent of the soldiers of General Harri son's army, which, following the battle of Lake Erie, won the battle of the Thames, and tlio lake states New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Illi nois, Michigan, Wisconsin and Minne sota, which wore most directly affect ed by this battle, and Louisiana, on whose soil the last battlo of the wnr of 1812 was fought The delegations from Rhode Island, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin will go to the bay on special boats chartered for this pur pose. The exercises will be opened on the morning of Sept 10, at 11:45 o'clock, with a national salute, this being the hour at which the first shot of the bat tle of Lake Erie was fired 100 years ago. The exercises will be held In the largo coliseum nt'Put-ln-Bay. Commo dore George II. Worthington of Clove land, president general of tho inter state board of the Perry's victory cen tennial commissioners, will call the meeting to order and introduco Gover nor Cox of Ohio, who will preside. President to Speak. President Woodrow Wilson will epcak for tho United States and n dis tinguished Canadian for the Dominion of Canada. The oration of tho day will bo delivered by former President Taft and addresses will also bo deliv ered by Lieutenant Governor It B. Burchard of 'Ithodo Island, represent ing Perry's native state, and Rev. J. A. Carey of Chicago, representing tho ne gro race, which did valiant service in tho battlo of Lake Erie. After theso exercises tho invited guests will go to Cedar Point, where a banquet given by the interstate board will bo held. This banquet will bo at tended by tho official representatives of tho United States government and tho Dominion of Canada and tho rep resentatives of the ten states partici pating in the centennial. The presi dent of the Daughters of tho War of 1812 and tho governor of each of tho participating states will bo invited to respond to tho toasts. The morning of Sept 11 tho guests will return to Put-in-Bay. On this day will occur tho impressive ceremony of tho removal from their present graves of the bones of tho American and Brit ,lsh officers killed in tho battlo of Lake 'Erie to tho crypt In the Perry memo rlal.'whero they will bo rclnterred with International honors. Sailors Buried In Lake. Following tho battlo of Lake Erie, tho sailors who were killed In tho en gagement were buried in tho lake. The bodies of tho officers were brought to Fut-in-Bay island, whero they were burled. That funeral was described by Historian Georgo Bancroft as fol lows: An .opening on the margin of Put-In-Bay was selected for the burial place for the officers who had fallen. Tho day was serene, the breezes hushed, the water un ruffled by a wavelet The men of both fleets mourned together. As tho boats moved slowly In procession tho musicians played dirges, to which the oars' kept time. The (lags showed tho sign of sor row. Solemn minute guns wero heard from tho ships. Tho spot whero the funeral train went on shore was a wild solitude. Tho Americans and British walked in alternate couples to tho graves, like men who In the presence of eternity renewed tho relations of brothers and members of one human family, and the bodies of tho dead wero likewise borne along and burled alternately, English and American side by side and undistin guished. Tho exercises on tho 11th of Septem ber will bo conducted by American and British chaplains jointly, ns was done s hundred years ago. Would Pay Vice President $25,000, Senator Saulsbury of Delaware Is tho author of n bill just Introduced In con gress to lncreaso tho salary of tho vice president from $12,000 to $25,000 a year. MEXICO j When Mexico's troubles are ended and the last fako story ho3 died, When tho lnsurrectos are quiet and the Ink on tho scare heads has dried. Wo shall rest, and faith wo shall need it, sit back for a morning or two Till tho writers of nightmare stories shall set us a-etcwlng anew. And Juaree at last shall bo happy, El Tho towns on tho IUo Grando will never sco soldiers mere. They shall hove real bull lights to plcaso them, with no"cr a belligerent call. They will dozo for a day at a sitting In the shodo of an old 'dobo wall. And Undo Port Diaz shall pralso us, and Uncle Port Dlaz shall blame. And no ono shall root for Huerta or boost tho Zapata game. But each who would read of frljolcs shall pick up hlB paper and faint For tho Joy of tho thing when ho sees It tho Mexican war yarn that ain't. Denver Republican. NOW PLAN MONUMENTS TO BEAUTIFY THE CANAL Architect's Report Is Laid Before Con gress by the President. President Wilson has Just sent to congress a report by tho commission of fine arts outlining a plan for beautify ing tho Panama canoC This includes two monuments and impressive archi tectural features at tho entrance. Daniel C. French, a New York sculptor, and Frederick Law Olmstead, landscapo architect of Boston, s.pent two weeks on the isthmus, nnd the re port submitted by tho president is based on their recominendatlQns. The commission does not find the canal construction work to be of architec tural beauty. "Tho entlro absence of ornament and no evidences of the aesthetic" ono of tho phrases describing tho work on tho canal. This, however, tho commis sion admits was to bo expected of a work that was to bo "strfttly for util ity." "Like the pyramids, it is lmpressivo because of its scale and simplicity," observes tho commission. "Anything dono merely to beautify would have been an impertinence in a work of that character." One important recommendation made by tho commission is for a monument at Culebra, where tho canal passes through tho continental divide. It is proposed that tho monument bo at least 100 feet high and of greater width, suitable for some inscription that moy bo read from tho otherSsldo of tho canal. Tho commission nlsorec ommonds n monument at Gold hill, the highest point in tho Culebra cut and some suitable structure in tho form of an archlat tho point whero tho chan nel front Llmon bay ends nnd tho canal actually begins, and something similar at tho Pacific entrance. A fringe of trees rising from the waters in Gatun lake Is condemned from an architectural viewpoint. Colo nel Goothals said it would have been too expensive to have removed tho trees. Tho commission recommends an ad ditional lighthouso nt tho Atlantic en trance of tho canal. Tho plan of tho shops at Balboa is condemned as un sightly, but this work has advanced so far that a change in tho plan Is not practical. Tho commission approves the gen eral plan for beautifying tho Pacific entranco to tho canal. $1,000,000 MARRIAGE PLOT. Alleged Scheme Discovered to Despoil Three Indians of Lands. Judgo E. J. Van Court of Oklahoma was In Carlisle, Pa recently taking tho depositions of two young Indians at tho Carlisle school in n suit involv ing an alleged marriage conspiracy to get possession of tho $1,000,000 estate of tho Dcrrisaws, an Indian family. It is alleged that Becloy Derrisaw, then eighteen years old, was lured from his homo In Oklahoma a year ago by a companion, conducted to McAlester and induced to marry ono Salllo Clndlo, aged thirty years. Ho married with out tho permission of It. B. Hutchin son, his guardian. Under tho Oklaho ma law a marriage without such per mission can bo annulled. ,Tho purpose of tho present suit Is to annul tho Der risaw marriage. Beoloy Derrisaw, his brother Oscar, eleven, nnd his sister Mattlo are joint heirs to tho $1,000,000 estate It is alleged that tho schemers also had picked out mates for Oscar nnd Mattlo. Tho guardian sent tho girl to an Ari zona Indian school nnd Oscar nnd .Bee ley to Carlisle. Tho conspirators are said to be led by an Oklahoma banker. TO REFIT CONSTELLATION. Appropriation Asked In Congress For Navy's Oldest Ship, Tho old frignto Constellation, built in Baltimore In 1707, when President Washington laid tho foundations of tho American navy, nnd under Captain Thomas Truxtun, tho victor of'dcclslvo 'fights with tho French frigates La In- purgento in 1709, and La Vengeance In 1800, which established tho United States as a maritime- power, has come into tho records of congress again as a living part of tho nation's naval es 'tabllshmcnt An appropriation of $50,000 was ask cd by Representative' Llnthlcum of Maryland for tho "repair and littjng out" of tho historic ship, tho oldest in tho navy. Tho Constellation is nt N'ewnort. Tho resolution would nro rido for her transfer to Baltimore for )ubllc exhibition. SPENT 23 YEARS IN AFRICAN WILD Black Men Are Splendid Race, Says Missionary. WOMEN ARE SUFFRAGETTES. More Advanced In Every Way Than the Men, Says Scotchman, Returning to America Cannabalism Rarely Practiced, and Never by the Women. Opposed to Conversion. Daniel Crawford, a Scotchman, who lost himself In tho heart of Africa for twenty-three years and who recently produced n book called "Thinking Black," arrived in New York n fow days ago. The missionary author Is a short man with sandy hair, beard and mustache. He has sharp llashlug eyes nnd n mnnnor of speaking rapidly and with great emphasis. "For twenty-three years," said Mr. Crawford on his arrival, "I never wore n collur, never saw a train of cars and hardly ever spoke to af white man. I rpally feel'more negro than white man. A quarter of a century ngo I was n young man, and I was dying of con sumption. I heard that the climate of Africa would be good for my trouble, and I went there as a missionary. I struck into tho heart of the country alone and lived by my rifle. Blacks a Magnlfioent Race. "I found the black men in Africa a magnificent race," Mr. Crawford con tinued. "I settled nmong the Luban tribes. There nre about a million of those people. They speak a wonderful language, which it took mo years to learn. There are twenty-three tenses of the verb and the noun has nineteen genders. I translated tho Bible Into the Luban language and nlso wrote u grammar, which, incomplete though it is, gives a pretty good idea of tho tongue." 'Did you find any of these peoples cannibals?" Mr. Crawford was nsked. 'Very few," he replied, "and it may Interest you to know thnt there Is no such thing ns a female cannibal. Al though the men may eat human flesh tho women of tho same tribe never do. The women are further ndvanced than the men and they band together to pro tect themselves from 'man tho mon ster.' Yes, tho movement for equal suffrage Is probably stronger in Cen tral Africa than anywhere In the world." Advised Against Conversion. "And wore you able to convert these people to Christianity?" 'The tribesmen with whom I made my residence were ready to profess Christianity, but I .dissuaded them from it They would have been but nominal Christians, nnd I feared that a change of faith would result in their destruction. Unless you have seen them ns they are you can have but n faint conception of theso black men in their natural stnte. The 'civilized' blacks hnve picked up njl your vices and fow of your virtues. But the negro under nntural conditions possesses n culture of his own. Ho has a definite and delightful code of etiquette." Mr. Crawford said that after his visit to this country was over ho would return to Africa to live again among tho people with whom he hns chosen to speud tho greater part of his life. LESS AMERICANS TO CANADA. Report Shows Decrease of Such Im migration to Dominion. Immigration figures for tho first three months of the fiscal year just issued nt Ottawa, Ont, show nn ln creaso of British and European im migrants over tho same period last year and a heavy decreaso In Imralgra tlon from tho United States. American settlers entering Canada during the first quarter this year num bered 44,003, as against 53,343 in the same period last' year. Total arrivals wore 210,200, as against 175,340 in tho same period last year. Of theso 84,305 came from Great Britain, nn Increase of 15,000. Tho government estimates that tho American settlers brought with them in ensh and effects up ward of $07,000,000. SHINS RUE SLIT TROUSERS First Man to Wear Them la Kicked by Newsboys. A martyr to fashion, W. Lefflngwoll Doak, a member of tho north side gen tility of Pittsburgh, was mobbed by a gang of newsboys in that city. Doak was the first wearer of tho prophesied slit trousers. When tho boys saw tho innovation they gathered about Doak, voicing un complimentary criticisms. Finally they began to jostle him and kick him in the shins. At sight of a policeman they scattered. Doak's trousers wero ol a light check material. Tho slit extended from tho bottom outside to about six inches from tho knee. Bright green hosiery of tho length women wear wero dis closed. ' New Gold Field In Kongo. A gold field of exceptional richness has been discovered in tho southern part of tho province of Katanga, in tho Belgian Kongo, ncordlng to dis patches Just received In Antwerp. Some of the samples are declared to j Held an ounce of gold to the ton. PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION SUBMIT TED TO THE CITIZENS OF THIS COMMONWEALTH FOR THEIR AP PROVAL OR REJECTION, BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OP THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYL VANIA, AND PUBLISHED BY OR DER OF THE SECRETARY OF THE COMMONWEALTH, IN PURSUANCE OF ARTICLE 2Vni OF THE CON STITUTION. Number One. A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing an amendment to article nine, section rour, or tno (jonsuiu tion of tho Commonwealth of Penn sylvania, authorizing the State to Issue bonds to tho amount of fifty millions of dollars for the improve ment of the highways of the Com monwealth. Section 1. Be it resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of tho Commonwealth of Pennsylva nia in General Assembly met That the following amendment to tho Con stitution of tho Commonwealth or Pcnnslvvanla bo. and the Bamo is horeby, proposed, in accordance with tho eighteenth article tnereoK That section four of article nine, which reads as follows: "Section 4. No debt shall bo ere ated by or on behalf of tho State, except to supply casual deficiencies of revenuo, repel invasion, suppress insurrection, defend tho State in war, or to pay existing debt; and tho debt created vto supply deficiency in reve nuo shall nover exceed, in tho aggro, gate at. any ono time, one million ot dollars," be amended so as to read as follows: Section 4. No debt shall bo cre ated by or on behalf of. tho State, except to supply casual deficiencies of revenue, repel invasion, suppress Insurrection, defend the State in wnr, or to pay existing debt; and the debt crcatod to suppy deficiencies In revenue shall never exceed, in the aggregate at nny ono time, one mil lion of dollars: Provided, howover( That tho General Assembly, irre spective of any debt may authorize tho State to issue bonds to the amount of fifty millions of dollars for the purpose of imp'roving and rebuild ing of highwnys of the Common Wealth. A true copy of Joint Resolution No. 1. ROBERT McAFEE. Secretary of the Commonwealth. Number Two. A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing an amendment to section seven, article three of tho Consti tution of Pennsylvania, so as to permit special legislation regulat ing labor. Section 1. Bo it resolved by tho Senate and House of Representatives of tho Commonwealth of Pennsylva nia in General Assembly met That tho following is proposed as an amendment to the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, in accordance with the provisions of tho eighteenth article thereof. Amend ment to Article Three, Section Seven. Section 2. Amend section seven, article three of tho Constitution of Pennsylvania, which reads as fol lows: -"Section 7. Tho General Assem bly shall not pass any local or spe cial law authorizing tho creation, ex tension, or impairing of liens: "Regulating tho affairs of counties, cities, townships, wards, boroughs. or school districts: "Changing tho names of persons or places: "Changing tho venue in civil or criminal cases: "Authorizing tho laying out, open ing, altering, or maintaining roads, highways, streets or alleys: "Rplating to ferries or bridges, or incorporating ferry or bridge compa nies, except for the erection of bridges crossing streams which form boundaries between this and any other State: "Vacating roads, town plats, streets or alloys: "Relating to cemeteries, grave yards, or public grounds not of tho State: "Authorizing tho adoption or legiti mation of children: "Locating or changing county-seats, erecting new counties, or changing county lines: "Incorporating cities, towns, or vil lages, or changing then: charters: "For tho opening and conducting of elections, or fixing or changing the place of voting: "Granting divorces: "Erecting now townships or bor oughs, changing township lines, bor ough limits, or school districts: "Creating offices, or prescribing tho powers and duties of officers in coun ties, cities, boroughs, townships, elec tion or school districts: "Changing tho law of descent or succession: "Regulating the practico or Juris diction of, or changing tho rules of evidence In, any Judicial proceeding or inquiry uoioro courts, aldermen, justices or tho peace, sheriffs, com missioners, arbitrators, auditors, mas ters in chancery, or other tribunals, or providing or changing methods for the collection of debts, or tho en forcement of Judgments, or prescrib ing tho effect ot Judicial sales of real estate: ' "Regulating tho fees, or extending tho powers and duties of aldermen, Justices of tho peace, magistrates or constables: "Regulating the management of public schools, tho building or re pairing of school houses and tho rais ing of money for such purposes: "Fixing tho rate of interest: "Affecting tho estates of minors or persons under disability. cxccDt af ter duo notico to all parties In in terest, to bo recited in tho special enactment: "Remitting fines, penalties and for feitures, or refunding moneys legally paia into tno treasury: "Exempting proporty from taxa tion: "Regulating labor, trade, mining or manuracturing: "Creating corporations, or amend ing, "renewing or extending the char ters thereof: "Granting to any corporation, asso ciation or individual any special or exclusive privilege or Immunity, or to any corporation, association or indi vidual the right to lay down a rail road track: "Nor shall tho General Assembly indirectly enact such Bpecial or lo cal law by tho partial repeal of a general law; but laws repealing local or special acts may bo passed: "Nor shall any law lis passed granting powers and privileges in any case whero tho granting of such powers and privileges shall have been provided for by general law, nor where the courts havo jurisdlc?. tlon to gnfnt tho same or give tho relief asked for," so as to read as follows: Section 7. Tho General Assembly shall not pass any local or special law authorizing the creation, exten sion or impairing of liens: Regulating the affairs of counties, cities, townships, wards, boroughs, or school districts: Changing the names of persons or places: Changing tho venue in civil or criminal cases: Authorizing tho laying out open ing, altering, or maintaining roads, highway, streets or alleys: Relating to ferries or bridges, or incorporating ferry or bridge compa nies, except for tho erection of bridges crossing streams which form boundaries between this and any other State: Vacating roads, town plats, streets or alleys: Relating to cemeteries, graveyards, or public (grounds not of the State: Authorizing the adoption, or legiti mation of children: Locating or changing county-seats, erecting new counties or changing county lines: Incorporating cities, towns or vil lages, by changing their charters: For tho opening and conducting of elections, vor fixing or changing the place of voting: Granting divorces: EBflcting new townships or bor- ouglrs, changing township lines, bor ough! limits, or school districts: Creating offices, or prescribing the powers and duties of officers in coun ties, cities, boroughs, townships, election or school districts: Changing the law of descent or succession: Regulating the practico or jurisdic tion of, or changing the rules of evi dence in, any judicial proceeding or inquiry, before courts, aldermen, jus tices of tho peace, sheriffs, commis sioners, arbitrators, auditors, masters In chancery or other tribunals, or providing or changing methods for the collection of debts, or the en forcing ,of judgments, or prescribing tho effect of judicial sales of real estate: Regulatlngi the fees, or extending tho powers and duties of aldermen, justices of the peace, magistrates or constables: Regulating the management of pub lic schools', the building or repairing of school houses and the raising of money for such purposes: Fixing the rato of interest: Affecting the estates of minors or persons under disability, except af ter duo notice to all parties in in terest, to be recited in tho special enactment: Remitting fines, penalties and for feitures, or refunding moneys legally paid Into the treasury: Exempting, property from taxation RegulatifHj labor,- trade, mining or manufacturing; but the legislature may regulate and fix tho wages or salaries, the hours of work or labor, anu maite provision lor tno protec tion, welfare and safety of persons employed by tho State, or by any county, city, borough, town, town-i ship, school district village or other civil division of the State, or by any contractor or sub-contractor perform ing work, labor or service for tho Stato, or for any county, city, bor ough, town, township, school district, village or other civil division thereof: Creating corporations, or amending, renewing or extending the charters thereof: Granting to any corporation, asso ciation or individual any special or exclusive privilege or immunity, or to any corporation, association, or individual the right to lay down a railroad track: Nor shall the General Assembly indirectly enact snch special or local law by tho partial repeal of a gen- oral law; but laws repealing local or special acts may bo passed: Nor shall any law bo passed grant ing powers or privileges in any caso, whero tho granting or such powers and privileges shall have been pro vided for by general law, nor whero. tho courts havo jurisdiction to grant the same or glvo the relief asked for. A true copy of Joint Resolution No. 2. ROBERT McAFEE, Secretary of tho Commonwealth. Number Three. A CONCURRENT RESOLUTION. Proposing an amendment to section thrco of article eight ot the Consti tution ot Pennsylvania. Section 1. Be it resolved by tho Houso of Representatives of tho Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (If the Senate concur), That the fol lowing is proposed as nn amend ment to tho Constitution ot tho Com monwealth of Pennsylvania, In ac cordance with the provisions of the eighteenth article thereof: Soction 2. Amend section three of article eight which reads as follows: "AH judges elected by tho electors of tho State at largo may bo elected at either a general or municipal elec tion, as circumstances may require. All tho elections for Judges ot tho courts for the several Judicial dis tricts, and for tho county, city, ward borough, and township officers, for regular terms of service, shall be hold on tho municipal election day: namely, tho Tuesday noxt following the first Monday of November In ,each odd-numbered year, but tho General Assembly may by law fix a different day, two-thirds ot all tho mombers ot each Houso consenting thereto: Provided, That such elec tions shall always bo held in an odd-numbered year," so as to read: Section 3. All judges electod by tho electors of tho Stato at largo may bo elected at either a general or municipal election, as circumstan ces may require. All elections for Judges ot the courts for tho several judicial districts, and tor county. city, ward, borough, and tpwnship officers, for regula terms of serv ice, shall bo hold on the municipal election day; namely, the Tuesday noxt following the first Monday of November in each odd-numbered year, but the General Assembly may ey law ux a different day, t.wo- thlrds of all the members of each Houso consenting thereto; Provided Tiiat such elections shall be hold in an odd-numbered year: Provldod fur; thor, That all Judges for tho courts oftho several Judicial districts hold ing offlco at tho present time, whoso terms of office may end in an odd- hold their offices until tho first Mon day of January in tho next succeed ing even-numbered year. A truo copy of Concurrent Resolu tion No. 3. ROBERT McAFEE. Secretary of tho Commonwealth. Number Four, A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing an amendment to section ono of article- nine of the Consti tution of Pennsylvania, relating to taxation. Section 1. Bo it resolved hv tho Senate and Houso of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylva nia in General Assembly mot, That tho following is proposed as an amendment to tho Constitution of tho Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in accordance with tho provisions of tho eighteenth article thereof: Section 2. Amend section ono of article nlno of tho Constitution of Pennsylvania, which reads as fol lows: tho same class of fiuhiects. within the territorial limits ot the authority levying the tax, and shall bo levied and collected under general laws; but the General Assembly may, by general laws, exempt from taxation: public property used for public pur poses, actual places of religious wor ship, places of burial not used or held for private or corporate profit and institutions of purely public charity," so as to read as follows: All taxes shall bo uniform upon the same class of subjects, within the territorial limits of tho authority levying tha tax, and shall be levied and collected under general laws, and tho subjects of taxation may be clas sified for tho purpose of laying graded or progressive taxes; but tho Gen eral Assembly may, by general laws, exempt from taxation public property used for public purposes, actual places of religious worship, places of burial not used or held for pri vate or corporate profit, and institu tions or purely public charity. A true copy of Joint Resolution No. 4. ROBERT McAFEE. Secretary of the Commonwealth. Number Five. A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing an amendment to tho Con stitution of Pennsylvania. Section 1. Bo it resolved by the Senate and Houbo of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylva nia in General Assembly met, That tho following is proposed as an amendment to the Constitution of Pennsylvania in accordance with the provisions of tho eighteenth article thereof: Article IX. Section 15. No obligations which have been heretofore issued, or which may hereafter bo issued, by any county or municipality, other than Philadelphia, to provide for tho construction or acquisition of water works, subways, under-ground rail ways or street railways, or tho appur tenances thereof, shall be considered as a debt of a municipality, within the meaning of section eight of nr tlclo nlno of tho Constitution of Pennsylvania or of this amendment, if tho net revenue derived from said property for a period of five years, either before or after the acquisi tion thereof, or, whero tho same is constructed by tho county or muni cipality, after tho completion thereof, shall have been sufficient to pay in terest and sinking-fund charges dur ing said period upon said obligations, or if the said obligations shall boreo cured by Hens upon tho respective properties, and shall impose no mu nicipal liability. Where municipali ties or counties shall issuo obliga tions to provide for the construction of property, as heroin provided, said municipalities or counties may also issue obligations to provide for tho Interest and sinking-fund charges ac cruing thereon until said properties shall havo bocn completed and In op eration for a period ot one year; and said municipalities and counties shall not bo roquired to levy a tax to pay said interest and sinking-fund charges, as required by soction ton ot articlo nlno ot tho Constitution of Pennsylvania, until after said prop erties shall have boon operated by said counties or municipalities during said nerlod Of ono year. Any of tho saiu municipalities or counues may Incur indebtedness in excess of seven per centum, and not exceeding ten of tho taxablo property therein, if said increase of indebtedness shall uuvu ueeu uasemuu uj uy mruu-iuuis nf tho elec.tnra vnHni? nt n nnhllft election, in such manner as shall bo provided by law. A truo copy of Joint Resolution No. 5. ROBERT McAFEE. Secretary of .the Commonwealth. 5! The Sum and Substance of being a subscriber to this paper is that you and your family become attached to It Tho paper becomts a member of tho family and its coining each week will bo as welcome as the ar rival of anyone that s dear. It wUl keep you informed on tha doings of the community and tho bargain of the merchants regularly advertised will enable you to cave many times tha cost of the subscription.