HL Terms, $2.00 a Year, in Ad va n ce. Bellefonte, Pa., November 22, [889. P. GRAY MEEK, - - - EpirTor. Jobbery in Howard Township. Howard township is blessed with a board of Supervisors, who, for incom. petency, unfairness and disregard of the people's rights, will size up pretty fairly with the Republican board of County Commissioners of this county. In June last one of tbe principal bridges in that township was swept away by the flood. The people have forded the creek and waded through the water as best they could ever since. A few weeks ago the authorities wak- ened up enough to go to work and re- buiid the bridge. A contract for the erection of abutments was entered into with an old contractor and resident of the township, Mr. Wm. Lvox, who in accordance with his agreement began work just as the specifications required. After proceeding for a few days he was notified that the agreement with him was nullified, and that he should cease work. A few days later Ep. T. GaL- LAGHER, of Lock Haven, was given the job to complete at an advance of $200 over and above what Mr. Lyox had given bond to do the-work for. GALLAGHER, it will be remembered, was the chap who paraded himself over this county two years ago boast- ing of his influence with the Knights of Labor, and doing political proselyt- ing for Sheriff Cooks and the Repub- lican ticket. Since then the Commis- sioners have been giving him his own price for such work as they have had done, paying him in one instance, it is reported, $3100 for work on the River bridge at Karthaus, that Moran Lu- cas, of Boggs township, offered to do for $1600. This Howard job is an ad- ditional steal from the tax-payers for the benefit of this individual in pay- ment of his supposed political services two years ago. Possibly the time will come when the republican tax-payers will get tired of this kind of jobbery. There is nothing that brings men to their senses as quick as making them pay for the folly of electing incompe- tents or rascals to office. As Little As It Was Silly. A friend down at Blanchard writes us as follows, under date of Nov. 106 : Mr. Meek, Dear Sir :—The editor of the Republican inthis week’s paper, has said that he would give a hundred dollars reward for the Democrat that had voted the Prohibition tick- et. I have been a voter for twenty-four years. I never voted any thing but the Democratic tick- et, not even in the county until this fall I voted the Prohibition ticket. If our correspondent knew the edi- tor of the News and Republican as well le is known hereabouts, he would not have paid the least attention to the matter he writes about. The offer made by the papers named was just about as hollow and empty as is the head of the individual claiming to edit them. It was intended to be a “smart” way of proving that no D-mocrat voted the Prohibition son who had formerly voted with the Democracy, and who voted the Prohi- bition ticket at the recent election, would call to ask about it, they would be told that any one who voted the Pro- hibition ticket was a Prohilitionist and not a Democrat, and consequently was not entitled to the reward. The ofler of the reward in the face of the fact that more Democrats than Republicans voted the Prohibition ticket in county, and the silly, contemptible excuse made for not paying it when the proof asked was furnished, are specimens of littleness and trickery that has never before disgraced a news- paper in Centre county. ticket. When a per this Brazil's Sudden Revolution. The revolution which 1s reported as having just occurred in Brazil, by which a well established and peaceful Empire was suddenly changed to a Re- public without any of the convulsions that usually attend such movements, is one of the most remarkable political | events in history. There were no prem- onitory indications to prepare the world | for the announcement of such a change. If there was dissatisfaction with the government it was not manifested by come. They are entirely unprepared and unfitted for the kind of govern- ment that has so suddenly been thrust apon them hy a revolution in the pro- motion of which they do not seem to have taken much of a part. It is evi- dently the work of politicians and mil- itary men who have yet to adjust their complicated interests and ambitions, with all the civil disturbance which such an adjustment implies in South American politics. The people of the United States nat- urally sympathize with a move- ment that substitutes a Republic for a Monarchy. Although they have rea- son to respect Dom Pepro as being bet- ‘ter than the average monarch, they fully recognize the right of the Brazil- ian people to discharge him from his imperial office and take the reins in their own hands. Yet 1tisimpossible to avoid the apprehension that they are going to have rough driving before there shall be a permanent settlement of the government. Worth Preserving. As a specimen of official literature and intelligence, we give the following letter just as it was written by Mr. Joux D. Dicker, one of the Republi- can Commissioners for this county, to Mr. Frep. Kurtz, of the Centre Hall Reporter. Comment is unnecessary : OFFICE OF COM. OF CENTRE CO. BrLLEFONTE, Pa., Nov. 17th, 1889. Mr. Kurtz Dear sir will Say in a few words what I think of you Didend I pattronise you with your Dirty Black- ard of a paper Ever sins you are in Centre Hall and voted twisht for you and treated you as a Gentleman and pattroniced your Mill and in every respect now you have Slanderd me in every paper and printed Lies on me you Dirty Lowlived rotton Bich yonand have pay youall I Owe youand IDont want you to sent me a nothe paper to my house as I would not take it to .. (we omit). So Dont Sent it anny longer I Shall have Nothing to do with Such a Little prinshled Man annymore 1Dont want you to tall to me a tall So remember and Stop this Sheet this Shall End Bussness Betwen Me and you Jonx D Decker. -—-——————————ai High Water. rains The heavy aud continuous that prevailed during the early part of the week brought about a condidion of thingstzomething similar, but in a less last degree, to the high water of June. Some of our local streams were converted into raging torrents and the river was greatly swollen, it being reported that a number of bridges on the West Branch have been again swept away. Williamsport and other river towns were inundated. Between that place and Elmira many of the railroad bridges were carried off, the Lycoming creek being almost as hizh as it was in June. Railroad traffic was impeded on the Northern Central and Philadelphia and Erie roads and the delayed. Truly, Jupiter Plavius has made this a remarkable mails year, ——Tke Williamsport Daily Gazette and Bulletin has been changed from a folio to a quarto form and considerably enlarged. We can't say that it is im- proved in appearance, for it was al- ways a paper whose appearance scarce - ly admitted of improvement. Itstill re- tains its old time good looks. In its new form it gives its readers an in" | creased amount of reading matter, in- cluding the latest news. In the latter respect it equals the dailies of much larger cities than Williamsport. - Its editorials are bright—a brightness,how- that is somewhat dimmed by bad political doctrine. With this one ever, exception, it is a very creditable paper —ecreditable alike to its editors and pub- lishers and to the city which so liberal- ly supports it because it is so deserv- ing of support. Mgrs. Par~ern, the mother of the Irish leader Cartes Stawarr Pa r- NELL, is said to be living in a state of destitution at her home in Bordentown, NI her by her famous father, Commodore Stewart, the “Old Ironsides” of our naval history, but sadly lacks the any public expression; the country was in a comparatively condition, and as a sovereign the Empe- ror seemed to be popular with his snb- prosperous jects. Such a situation as this render- ed more astonishing the intelligence means of living. In a letter toa frignd in Philadelphia she admits her extreme This fady should not be in What poverty. suen destitute elrcumstances. her relations are with son is noi known ‘othe public, but they should not be such as to admit of her being dependent upon the charity ‘of others. Besides, the generous | American people should not be so forgetful of the glorions service of 140d Ironsides” as to let his daughter that aimost in a day the imperial head | of the nation was deposed and banished from the country and the government changed to a Republican form with ap- parently the almost unanimous consent of the people and the army. If this great political change can be permanently effected without more dis- turbance than this, it will be fortunate for the Rrazilian people. Bat, in all I'kelihood, their troubles are yet to sufier from want iu her old age. exseTmi—rveisam————" ——The Philadelpia Record, which iz for CLEVELAND'S 1892, remarks: ‘Governor Hirnn can renomination in afford to wait until his spurs have grown longer.” Whereupon the New York Sun, which ecbamnions Hinn and opposes CLEVELAND, says: “Govern- or Hing, of conrse, can wait as well as any one ; but how long is the Demo- eratic party going to wait for victory ?” We trust it will not have to wait until Dana ceases his malicious and treach- erous opposition to Democratic presi: dential candidates. esr v————— ——1It is altogether probable that we have heard the last about Dem- ocratic illiteracy from the Republican organs of this county, for years tocome. Republican commissioner DECKER’ letter is a corker on tnis subject. moo em E a ————— Using the Torch. The Reading Getting Rid of Its Old- Fashioned Coal Cars. She occupies the property left | her celebrated | READING, Pa., November 19.—The Philadelphia and Reading railroad ed a novel but effective plan of getting rid of their old-fashioned four-wheeled coal cars, now regarded altogether out of date for the requirement of modern | rolling stock. The wheels are removed | from the trucks, and then the cars are piled ap in great heaps in the yard and the torch applied. For a week twenty- five cars a day have been destroyed, but the work was found to be going on too slowly at that rate, so on Saturday a | heap of 200 was made at once and reduc | ed to ashes. That rate will be continued. At one period of the Reading’s history 8,000 of these four-wheeled cars were 1n {use on the road from the coal mines to | the seaboard, but at that time locomo- 1 1 tives were lighter and trains did not usually comprise more than 125 cars. | Now, however, the heavy engires em- ' poyed to transport coal trains haul from | 150 to 170 cars. Recently the four- ! wheeled cars were condemned by the | company as unsafe, because of the fre- | quent wrecks occasioned by their giv- | ing way to the pressure to which they were subjected. Oaly eight-wheeled "cars will be used hereafter on the road. | The old iron and wheels collected from the debris remaining is carefully classi- | | | | fied, and will be used tor other purposes lin the com pany’siron works. The Kangeroo in Commerce. This Country. There are 6,000 kangaroo skins re- ceived in Newark, N.J., every week. | They are all tanned in one large estab- i lishment on Sussex avenue, and are then made into fine shoes. and New Zealand furnish kangaroo hides for the world. The kangaroos are kill- | from the coast, and are shipped from | Melbourne, Sidney aud New Castle. in | | Australia, and from Masterton, in New | Zealand. Up to 1859 the kangaroos were killed and eaten in Australia and their hides cut intost oe strings. Rut an English- man named Brown in that year discov- ered the remarkable character ot the leather, and brought several thousand skins to this country. He tried to sell of the novelty, and he had to sell them at a sacrifice to a bookbinder. The book binder made triangular corner pieces in ledgers and commercial books out of the skins, and so ascertained the good qurlity of the leather. It was in this way that the Jarge leather tac- tories were first attracted to kangaroo. The skin was found to be very tenacious and the compactness of the grain pre- vents its absorbing water, while the acids in blacking meet with an almost impervious substance. It was hard work for y ars to get kangaroo skins. It was not until the Newarker, who now tans them, sent agents to Austra- lia three years ago that the demand could be supplied. The characteristic climate of Australia and the pugnacity of the kangaroo make hunting the hides dangerous. Winter startsin May and ends in December in that country. The rest of the year the heat isintense the thermometer frequently reaching li40°. Eight men hunt torether for kangaroos. They are called a “set”. When brought to bay the kangaroo jumps like a flash for the chest, and tries to crush it in with its fore feet. To prevent this each man wears across his breast a two or three inch matting. Armed with a spear, with a club attachment on the other end, they ride upon swift horses into a herd. With the agility and equiyoise of circus riders they stand erect upon their horses and use their spears and clubs. The kangaroo is able to jump clear over a liorse. As the game is bagged it is skinned, and the skin is stretched on the ground and pegged down 0 preventshrinkage. The flesh furnishes meat for the camp. Esch man places his private mark upon his booty, and when they have 100 skins apiece they return to civilization. There are twenty varieties of kanga- ros, among them the blue, red, Wal | laby, black, gray and Forester, the lat- | ter furnishes the best leather as it lives | mainly in wooded sections. When “shipping ports are reached the hunters dispose of the goods by auction to the highest bidder and receive about sev- enty cents a pound. Kangaroo hunt- ers make large profits. One man was known to have cleared $3,500 free of living expenses in a single year. The | tanning of kangaroo skins is confined to men employed by Americans, as other dealers cannot afford to pay the high prices for the raw material. The result is that the Parisian and London shoe manufacturers buy their stock of kangaroo leather directly from New ark, and;prominent dealers in Germany Greece, Spain, and even Australia itseif obtain their supplies from the same. The manufacturer here scouts the idea that the original sevenleague boots were made from the skin of the great Au- stralian leaper.— Providence Journal, nea cme re » How Ile Got Out. Providence Journal. Governor Foraker says he is “out of polities.” “You git,” said the Califor- nia householder to the surreptitious vis- itor at a late hour in the night. “You bet,’’ said the visitor, as he sized up his revolver. managers at the shops here have adopt- | Evtensive Utilization of Their Hides in | Australia | ed in Australia, about 300 miles back | the hides to tanners but they were shy! huouter’s | Catholies Favor High Licnse, They Believe It the Only Hopefu Means of Stenning the Dide of Intemperance. BALTIMORE, Nov. 18.—The Catholic clergy and laity of the city ot Balumorve in mass meeting yesterday, under the Presidency of their diocesan head adopt Led resolauons mm favor of high license as “the only feasiole and the only hopeful means of stemming the deluge of vices and crimes of which drunkenness is the frightful source.” "hey declare, how- ever, “that to make the remedy really euective the license shoud be put up so high as to make 1 practically prohibit- ory as regards the multitude ol saloons which are demoralizing snd brutalizing the poor,” and * that certain restrictions should be enacted as to the time and plice of sale aud the character ot those who may be permitted wo carry ou the tratfic. Thus the number of saloons in any one radius should be limited by statute, and they should not be suttered too near to churches or schools.” Archbishop Ireland addressed the { meeting, showing the postion of the ' Catholic Churcii on temperance, which "church, he said, “as absolutely and irrevo- cably opposed to drankenness and drunkard making.” He aad d: “Your moveent for bizh wxation of the traflic with judicious supplementary clauses as to the character of venders of liquor,and forfeiture in case of violation of laws, deserves the support af all. This will not do awav with allevil ; burit wili re- duce immenseiy the evil, and its best (results will be where they are most needed, among the poor and the labor- ing classes.” Cardinal Gibbons, who presided, also addressed t e¢ meeting briefly, closing with these remarks . “The blow that we “trike to-nicht 1s a blow struck for the cause of the laboring wan. It must and shall be successful.” He then intro- duced the Rev. James Nugent, the Kn- glish temperance orator, who wade a long address. Tae meeting, which was held in Harris’ Academy of Music, was the natural sequence of the position taken by the Catholic Congress on the temper- | ance question. ! Swope The Aggressor. Responsibility for the Republican Butch- ery Kentucky. WASHINGTON, Nov. :7.—The usual accounts of the murderous affray in which Mr. Swope met his death and General Goodloe was fatally wounded, tare given a very different version by | Assistant Postmaster-General Clarkson since his return from the funeral. It | appears that Swope made himself notor- | iously offensive by taking advantage of the supposition that General Goodloe, being a man with a large family de- pendent upon him, would naturally be averse to an encounter. Swope, a man without a family, therefore took oc- ‘ casion to parade his own imagined cour- age to the disparagement of his antago- nist. Mrs. Goodloe, with a woman's instinct, saw that this state of affairs ‘could not last lone without a collision sooner or later. Not long ago she asked her husband to make her but one promise, that it be should become in- volved in personal conflict with Swope he would not be the aggressor. When Swope, a man six feet four inches, made his attack on Goodloe, who v as but five feet eleven inches, the | latter, after being wounded the first time, closed with his assailant, and while warding off the pistol which Swope was trying to level at his head, drew a small pruning knife which he was always in the habit of carrying and began using it in self-defense. When the surgeons were still in | doubt as to the extent of Goodloe’s in- | juries and as to whether death would | soon follow, the wounded man said: “Doctor, if I should die before Mary comes, tell her T was not the aggressor.” General Clarkson has explained the circumstances to the President and Secretary Windom, which has convin- ced them that Swope was the aggressor and that General Goodloe was not only acting in self-defense but had been taunted by his antagonist as afraid to fight. at Lexington, More Fighting in Kentucky. French-Eversole Faction tne War of Extermination. The Renew MouNT SrErLING, Ky., November 16.—There has been conflicting reports of the Perry county war last week and nothing definite has been ascertained until now. Judge W. L. Hurst, who has been trying some of the members of the opposing factions on an indictment for murder, was shot, but luckily the ball had spent its force. No other demon- strations were made until Wednesday night, when a dynamite bomb was thrown at the house in which Judge Hurst was stopping. It struck an in- tervening limb, falling to the ground and making a harmless explosion. This, with threatenings, caused the entire town,including visiting attorneys, { to apply the war paint, and they, with the French and Eversole factions,await- ed the begiuning of the pending fray. However, the factions alone made fight, which continued during all of Thurs- day, and after the smoke had cleared away it was discovered that only one man, Ed Campbell, had been killed. The fight was resumed at intervals dur- ing the night, but without loss of life. On Friday the French party had been reinforced and from the hilltops They torced the Eversoles from their fortifications and retreated down the river, pursued by their enemies. Jesse Field, of the French party,/ was wound- ed and the rest retreated. These parties minated before the war will cease. The Great Boodler Swindled, i ¥ Boston Republic. Quay ought to indict Mahone for get- ting money from him under false pre- tences. The pesky repudiator knew all along that he stood no show of carrying Virginia, and yet he kept on demanding and getting more and more boodle from the Pennsylvanian. bombarded a house in which were quar- | tered the Eversoles, killing John Me- Night, another one of that part) are determined and brave men and it! seems that one faction must be exter-! | now that the Racing Round the Globe. Women fwo Young and a Man Trying to Beat Fach Other and Phineas Fogg. At least one, and, according to re- port, two representatives of New York newspapers and one writer for a maga- zine, started yesterday on a trip around the world, determined to beat the cighty- day record of Phineas Fogg. The first to start was Nellie Bly, of the New York World, who left on the Hamburg steam- er Augusta Victoria at 9.40 o'clock a. m. She expects to go around the globe in seventy-five days, being due at the World office, according to arrangements, on January 27. Her baggage consisted of a change of clothing done up ina shoulder satchel and a small valise. At 6 o'clock p. m. Miss Elizabeth Bisland was sent on a similar journey hy the Cosmopolitan magazine at fifteen minutes’ notice. She took the 6 o'clock train trom the Grand Central Depot and will arrive in San Francisco next Thurs- day, when she will take the Oceanic on her trip around the earth from west to east. The two girls are going in differ- ent directions and there is considerable discussion as to, which took the better route. Miss Bisland has done work for several New York newspapers and she is a strong and intrepid young woman. She expects to reach Yokohama on De- cember 11th and Heng Kong six days later. From China she will go to Lon- don and thence to New York, where she hopes to arrive on January 25th— two days earlier than Miss Bly, al- though she started out more than eight hours later. The third globe-trotter is said to be a New York Herald man. 1t is report- ed that he started on his journey on the Augusta Victoria and will take the same route as Miss Bly. All the trav- elers calculate on beating Phineas Fogg’s record by several days. It is not un- likeiy that the east-bound and west- bound racers will meet somewhere in Asia.—New York Commercial Adver- tiser. i - Senator Ingalls in Danger. Topeka, Kan., Nov. 17.—Senator Ingalls will not succeed himself in the United States Senate without a hard ficht. The Legislature which will choose his successor will be elected a year from now, and the Republican majority will be by no means so over- whelming as it has been heretofore. The thing that complicated the situa- tion, so far as Ingalls is concerned, is the growing sentiment in favor of re- submitting the Prohibition question. On this question the battle will be fought next year. Senator Ingalls has said: “Resubmission is all nonsense. The people don’t want 1t. They've got what they want—prohibition. If the question were submitted to a vote it would cairy by more than the famous 82,000 majority. The strongest opponents of Incalls will be Judge C. Foster, Judge of the United States Circuit Court at this place. nounces that he has sent in his re- signation to join the resubmission eru- sade, and contest Mr. Ingalls’ saat. He is very popularin Kansas. Senator In- gallsis here conferring with his politi- | He is a Republican, and he an- | al friends and mapping out bis cam- paign. He Has Got to Dance. The correspondent of the New York Star writes: A well-known character in Washington, “Doctor” Watt Drew, a prominent druggist, is a friend of Mrs. Cambpell, wite of the Ohio Governor- elect. Early last spring he said to her ; “Your husband is going to be nomina- ted for Governor of Ohio and will be elected.” “Nonsense, replied Mrs. Cam- pell. “Will you promise me one thing if he is?’ Drew continued; “may I dance with you at the inaugural ball?” “You shall,” Mrs. Cambpell promised. Dr. Dréw has just received a telegram from the wife of the Governor-elect,say- ing : “The second dance is reserved for you,” and now he wishes he had not ex- | acted the promise. Dr. Drew is about as far around the belly a: any two of | the Fat Men’s Club,and it is many years since a dress coat and he were on close terms of acquaintance. Two tailors are said to beat work on his suit, and a proposition is agitated among his friends to accompany him in a body to Colum- busand see him safely through the or- deal The Johnstown Orphans. The Wise Provisions Made for Them by the State Cominission. Within the next ten days it is expect- ed that the 300 disputed Johnstown claims will be adjusted, and then the work of the commission will end. Francis B. Reeves has just returned to Philadelphia from the Conemaugh val- ley, where he met the Pittsburg mem- bers of the commission. When its work is completed, Mr. Reeves says the commissioh will have disbursed $1,500,- 000 in an cffort to resuscitate the people of the stricken valley, and will still have $20,000 on hand. This money is to be { deposited with some Philadelphia trust company yet to be selected as an annu- ity fund. Tt will enable every child who was made an orphan by the flood to receive an annuity of $50 a year until it reaches the age of sixteen years, and this will probably be the most tar-reach- | ing in its results of any of the work of the commission. TTC A Voice from the Soup. Philadelphia Record. Before the election Governor Foraker insisted that the election of Campbell would be a triumph of free wool. But returns ave in he lifts his head above the edge of the tureen to say that the liquor-sellers beat him. doesn’t like the taste of his medicine; ' but there is no use in calling it by a new name. ——Mrs. Kraemer, sister of General Grant, at a Sunday evening service in a hl a Great Times at the Bargain Counter. New York Sun. The value of a panel in the Cabinet for advertising a thrifty business in dry goods and notions has been illustrated this week in Philadelphia. The unfort- unate Pan-Americans were, of course, towed down to Wanamaker's retsil es- tablishment and marched through every department from top to bottom, from millinery to hosiery. The Adminis- tration was represented on this joyous occasion by the Rev. Dr. Scott, Presi- dent Harrison's father-in-law, who act- ed as a sort of honorary floor walker. The diplomats who are here as the nation’s guests were conducted in a procession through Wanamaker’s shop, the venerable father-in-law of the President of the United States leading the way. They saw the plain and striped Surahs at 50c. a yard. They in- spected the marvels of the Thirteenth and Market streets corner, where wom- en’s colored French felt hats that ought to sell at $1.25 to $1.95 are going at 75c., and fresh, handsome goods at that. They tested the firm, springy texture of Wanamaker's nobby frieze overcoats, English box cut. They were shown the latest designs in Hamburg edgings, from ten cents up. They were called upon to admire the real 40-inch French Sebastopol, in all the prevailing plain shades, offered at figures that have thrown rival establishments into a state of coma. They viewed all that 1s new- est and tastiest in gent’s silk neckties. They were shown the little loves of lay- ettes, at prices within the means of the most economical. Shelves were ran- sacked and boxes were opened to spread before their delighted eyes the rich and elegant moire-antiques at 85c., theele- gant and rare almas in fast colors at 49c., the stylish and rich worsteds marked down to sensational figures, the children’s and misses’ wool hats—just the thing for school—at from 50c. to $1.38, the pressed glass finger bowls in chaste patterns, the silk warp Henriettas at $1 08 that must be seen to be appre- ciated. And we believe that there was a pardonable tremor in the Rev. Dr. Scott’s aged voice as he al nost rever- ently called attention to the crowning triumph of the establishment, the grandest achievement of Wanamaker’s genius, the 40-inch silk and wool basket- weave plaids, royally rich in colorings, some with ombre effects, at Tbc., sold elsewhere at $1.55. In fine, the Spanish American diplo- mate, statemen and scholars saw every- thing that Wanamaker himself could have shown them, but they did not see him. He was away from his bar- gain counter, “compelled to be absent in Washington on official business connec- ted with his position as Postmaster-Gen- eral.” It is a pity he was not there to show his stock of goods in person. How :unc- tuously his persuasive voice would have dwelt upon the wearing qualities of the striped Surahs at half a dollar! With what consummate dexterity would his own deft hands have flung the forty-inch silk and wool basket- weave plaid across the counter, and gathered it into fan-shaped folds to ex- hibit the royal richness of its colorings and to bring out the full beauty of its ombre effects. 3 A Hungarian Jollification, The Bloody Manner in which the Huns Amuse Themselves. HazreroN, Nov. 15 —Wednesday sight the Hangarians of Milnesville held a jollification which wound up in a riot among themselves. Knives, clubs and stones were used. One of the houses was badly wrecked. After the fight was over one of their number, Mike Jogon, was found dead, with a terrible gash four inches long in the back of his head evidently inflicted with a sharp hatchet. John Tosca was badly beaten, Mike Jimeco lost an eye and part of his right ear is missing, Stephen Boskes is minus part of his nose and injured in- | ternally. He ' i er free Methodist church in Brooklyn, told the | bor and your home.” congregation that for twenty-five years | she hadprayed for the General’s conver- | sion, and that shortly before his death the spiritual change took place, as she learned from her daughter and Dr. Newman. The fight lasted for over an hour, and was so fierce that the townspeople were compelled to flee to their cellars for safety. Happily,no revolvers were used; had there been, there is no doubt but that more than one would have been killed. There 1s no direct evidence as to who murdered the man, as none of the townspeople saw him struck. The coun- try is being scoured for the assailants, and if caught they will be summanly dealt with, as crimes of this sort are gelting to be too frequent among this class of people. A Year of Great Crops. Dun & Co’s review of trade, of the 16th inst., say: Business continues healthy, confident and unprecedented in volume. Long ago it was held that thy year's results would turn upon the crops, and it is now certain that the yield has been on the whole about the biggest ever known. The question whether the whole yield is 20,000,000 or 30,000,000 bushels be- low the maximum is not important. The cotton crop will much exceed any previous one, if the latest of fiscal fig- ures are correct. The corn crop will exceed any preceding one by 100,000,000 to 200.000,000 bushels ; the oat crop is also the largest ever known, and the shortage in potatoes and fruit is 1mmense- ly overshadowed by the gain in meats. The exports of provisions and cattle in Octo! er $12,704,857 in value, against $7,585,277 last vear, a gain of (8) per cent., and while the breadstuffs movement was $145,000 short of last year, the increase in cotton has been enormous. Brler Clarkson's newspaper in Jowa on the morning of the clection said : “Protection to American labor has been one of the main issues of the campaign. Republicanism has been aligned on the side of Arerican labor. Democracy has battled for Free Trade and the con- sequent reduction of American wages fo the Jaw prices paid in Kngland and oth- trade countries. Workingmen, think betore you vote, and then vote for the party which will protect your la- Clarkson knew what he was talking about. The workingmen knew the import of the votes they cast. And when the vote was counted Tariff Reform was on top.—Record. Brier mamma