wll P.GRAY MEEK, - - - Eprom Barned in Effigy. Congressman McCoryick, of the Ly- coming District, does not seem to give the general satisfaction in awarding the post offices at his disposal, that a con- gressman with an eye to his populari- ty would naturally desire to give. Ie made a bad mess of the Beech Creek post office, where hie turned out a well qualified old Republican named SyiTH, whom almost everybody in the neigh- borheod was satisfied with, and who on account of his efficiency had been al- lowed to hold on under the Cleveland administration, and put in his place a voung fellow named Exocn HASTINGS, who is Swyrru’s superior only in the capacity to do more party worl. That the people of the neighbor hood most concerned in this postmaster question, did not want a change was ghown by Hastines' application hav- ing but sixteen names on it, while the remonstrance against putting Sy 1TH out had more than a hundred signatures. But as Mr. McCormick is using the post offices as rewsrds for personal and party service, the wish of the people for whose benefit it should be supposed the post office at Beech Creek exist wasnot taken into account. That this conduct of the congressman has created great dissatisfaction in the neighborhood ef- fected by it, was indicated by his Beech Creek constituents burning him in effi- gy last week. The Republicans who took part in this dummy cremation, should by this time be able to see that in disposing of the offices the party managers pay greater heed to the demands of the spoilsmen, than to the wishes and in- terest of the people. Princely Munificence, The presentation and opening of Mr. AxpreEw CarNEgie's “princely gift,” as the newspapers call it, of a $300,000 free library to the city of Allegheny, on the 20th inst., was attended by impres- sive ceremonies and the presence of no less distinguished a public personage than President Harrison. Itissaid that Mr. CirNEGIE coatemplates treating Pittsburg in the same “princely” man- ner by furnishing it with a free library that will cost a miilion of dollars. Dazzled by such osteatations muni- ficence,there are too many who are un- able to see back of it the amount of fleecing to which the public is subject- ed to enable such “princely” acts to be done. By means of an extortionate tariff which has “protected” CarNEGIE in getting undne profits on his manu- factures, every body that uses them, whether it be the railroad companies whieh are sure to recoup the increased cost at the expense of their customers, or the individual needing structural and other kinds of steel, is made to contribute to the steel-king’s “princely” benefactions. Wouldn'tit be of greateradvantage to the people it they should furnish their own libraries and save the tribute which enables Mr. CARNEGIE to furnish them? A system which makes the people the beneficiaries of the “prince- ly” liberality of a clags made rich by discriminating legislation, is not one that is calcuiated to promote either the moral, political or pecuniary welfare of the citizens of a republic. Editorial Corruption, The Chief Clerk of the Commission- ners of Schuylkill county has created quite a sensation in the journalistic eir- cles of that section by declaring that all the newspaper men of the county are corrupt. We are not in a position to know the extent of editorial corruption in other counties, but if some one, judging from the showing of the Audi- tor General's Report, should say that some of the editors of Centre county display symptoms that indicate cor- ruption, he wouldn't be a great dis- tance from the truth. The report shows that for advertising the constitutional amendments the following charges were made by the different newspapers of the county, and paid by the State : Keystone Gazette, $203; Bellefonte Republican, $198.80; Centre Democrat, $118.77; Daily. News, $51.80; Centre Hall Reporter, $26.15; Democratic Watchman, £24.70. The service rendered for these pay- ments differed very little inthe space oc- cupied and the number of publications, and the editor who made the lowest char:e put his figures as high as he! conscientiously could under oath, The difference shown in the amounts of the bills rendered and payments received would seem to justify the assertion that the editorial fraternity of Centre county is not entirely devoid of corruption. Unsympathetic Sympathy. We ohserve that Governor Beaver and other political leaders of his strive in this State, profess to be in sympa- thy with the baliot reform movement, but see a constitutional objection to the Australian system which they say could only be overcome by a constitu- tional amendment. A provision of the constitution requires the ballots to be numbered, and this they are quite sure renders the proposed new plan of vot- ing incompatible with that document. Isn't it singular that politicians who have been entirely blind to the consti- tutional restraint of corporate abuses, and haven't been able to make them- selves see that the constitution requires an anti-discrimination law and other lezal curbs on the encroachments of corporations, should so readily discern the impediment which the organic law throws in the way of a reformed sys- tem of voting? Is it unjust to them to believe that by involving it in anamend- ment contest, as they did with Prohibi- tion, they hope to defeat ballot reform, or at least delay it until after the next Presidential election. But the true friends of honest elec- tions believe that the adoption of the Australian system does not require any change of the organic law. The bal- lots may continue to be numbered as constitutionally requiregdy and yet pre- serve the secresy which the reformed system is intended to secure. Several plans are suggested which would fully insure the compatibility of the Aus- tralian system with the requirements of the constitution. A Lone Kicker. There is something ludicrously mel- ancholy in the lamentation of that good Republican WmartoN BARKER, of Philadelphia, by which he gives vent to his lacerated feelings, as follows, in the last issue of his paper, the Amer ican: It may as well be learned now as at any later day that the hand laid on Philadelphia is the same that is laid on the State. The Quay sys- tem is over all. The two local managers, Mar- tin and Porter, are Mr. Quay’s instruments. The city is controlied by them, and controlled all the more readily because President Harri- son has delivered over the State to Mr Quay’s use, and the bribe of the Federal “patronage” can be employed to carry out their schemes. The dolorous import of the above jeremiad will have no effect upon Pennsylvania Republicans. They know full well that the hand of Quay is on Philadelphia. They know equal ly well that it is also on Pennsylvania, but they seem to be entirely satisfied that it should be sg. Long years of complacent servitude has rendered them incapable of seeing anything wrong init. In fact their party fanat- kicks thing is lovely. If Barker few of his party kicking with him. Balancing the Wrong Way. It is good advice to tell the farmers to balance their accounts at the end of every year, so that they may know whether they are making or losing money in their business; but such balancing of farm accounts in these days usually shows the “demmed total” in favor of the honest granger to be a rath- er meager quantity,if it is shown at all. For example, we see in one of our exchanges that a farmer in Lower Ma- cungie township, Lehigh county, upon summing up his income and outlay during the past year, and striking the balance,discovered that above his farm and living expenses he had cleared the magnificent average of ten cents a day. This is, indeed, a slow aceufhnlation of wealth for a farmer doing business right ir the midst of a region which on account of its iron manufactures is in the fullest enjoyment of tariff protec- tion, and which, according to the theo- ry of the tariffites, should furnish the most profitable home market for agri- cultural productions. But in spite of the boasted advantages of a tariff: made home market the farmer at the end of the year too offen finds that af- ter he has paid the tariff tax on every article he uses in his businessand upon all the necessaries of his daily living, the balance is an the wrong side of Ws ledger, and the mortgage grows apace. wa aca AL A Tariff Reform Victory. The official count in the Fourth con- gress district refutes the pretense of the monopoly tariff’ supporters that the re- formers did not make a substantial gain at the recent election. Rev- BURNS majority over AYRES waa 8579. | In 1888 KeLLy's majority was 9639, | showing that the tariff strength in the ! district sustained a cut of 1060. This can not be accounted for by the redue- | | tion in the general vote, as the Repub- lican candidates for other offices had in creased majorities in the district. Judge Kenny's majority in 1886 was<11,604, in | ‘88 it was 9639, and at the special election i when the fight was made exclusively on the tariff’ question, REVBURN'S majority showed the reduced figures of 8579. The icism leads them to believe that every- |, next fall we are afraid he will find but | tariff reformers have reason to be grati- fied with this evidence of the progress their cause is making. al movement advances. AEC TC SI TT SEY Work at Home. It is strange the peculiar gift some people have of looking through a mountain and discovering a mouse. Since Olio went Democratic last fall, the Philadelphia Press and other re- publican sheets of this State have al- most worked themselves into hysterics over the fear that the Democratic leg- islature of that State would so reappor- tion the counties into congressional dis- | tricts, that hereafter the Democrats would have at least a fair representa- tion in congress. Day afier day, and week after week, they have bleated and bawled abot the gerrymander that was likely to be perpetrated in Ohio,un- til their readers, it hypocracy would sicken them, must be in the last stage of political prostration. These papers forget that right here in Pennsylva- nia, under their own noses and amoung the people who daily read their dia tribes against the wrong of an unfair apportionment, we are suffering froma republican political gerrymander, com- pared to which the Democratic propo- sition to redistrict Ohio, is eminently and politically just. journals tarn their batteries upon the | republican Pennsylvania gerrymander, that gives to the party to which they belong, one representative for every 25,000 votes, while the Democrats are allowed but one for every 65,000 votes, the public may take some stock in their pretended efforts for fair apportionment and equal representation. Here at home is a wide field for republicans to work a just apportionment racket in, | and to it we invite their united and earnest attention. STI CET PIRSA, Isit so? After all the blowing of the republi- can county papers about the balance in the county Treasury, at the last set- tlement, it now leaks out, that that balance is from $12,000 to $14,000 less than represented. In that statement, that puts the county surplus at $23, 100.47, including all the outstanding taxes, worthless notes, out-lawed dupli- cates and accounts, there is no mention made of the contract price for the su- perstructure of the bridges at Karthaus and Howard. The cost of the iron for these two bridges, we are told, will be over $12,000 of which but a little over $1,000 has been paid—$400.00 on the ; Kartbaus bridge and $644.00 on ac- count of the one at Howard. For the balance due the Pittsburg Bridge Com- pany, on their contract for these two bridges there is no estimate given, nor is there allowance made to pay the difference out of next years estimates. With these two bridges completed and paid for, neither of which is taken into account in the county statement, the balance in favor of the county, af- ter two years of republican admiuistra- tion will be but $12,000, and if the worthless accounts that have been re- vived and placed in the list of assetts are deducted {rom this, the total bal- ance of cash and available taxes will be less than $7,600. When a board of Commissioners can smuggle up an item of $1,566.60 of; State tax, without accounting for it in any way, is it to be wondered at, tha they wonld drop out of their statement a little indebtedness der to make the county balance ap- pear larger than it really is. ¥rom Afiluen co to Starva tion. Once Prosperous, the Father Dies in the Poorhouse, and the Son Starves to Death in a Freight Car. PrrrsBurG, Pa., Feb. 23.—Eight months ago the body of Dr. Charies H. Miller, of Hutchinson, Kan., was found | lying in a freight car on the Alleghany Valley Railroad, in this city. There wera no marks of violence, and although the case was supposed to be one of murder, the mystery surrounding the stranger’s death was never cleared up. No relatives claimed the body, and the authorities long ago practically forgot the case. From inquiries made recently by an old friend of Dr. Miller, it now appears certain tifat he was actually starved to death. He was the son of Joseph Mil- ler, once a wealthy resident of Lykens, Dauphin county, Pa. There were alto- gether three sons, Edward, William and | Charles H. Edward was a prosperous tanner ; William a contractor and builder, and Charles, the youngest, a | student at the Umiversity of Pennsyl- vania. Charles developed talent as a writer, | and after he was graduated as a doctor of medicine he devoted more time to literary work than to his profession. He wrote a little volume of poems that were highly praised, and was a regular contributor to a number of periodicals. In 1877 the mines in which the family were interested were discovered on fire. It was two years before work was re- | sumed, and real estate in the town was hardly worth the taxes. To make mat- ters worse for the Miller family, a flaw | was found in the title of the property. They were dispossessed, and in his old age Joseph Miller found himself penni- less, William and Edward Miller, the older sons, were pulled down in the wreck. In a few years Mrs. Miller, a TTI Whenever these | of $11,000, in or! died, and her husband found a resting lace in the Dauphin county almshouse, ., where he died alone, a year ago. The education- | Edward Miller is now a street-car i conductor in Philadelphia, and William ' Miller a carpenter. | Dr. Charles H. Miller found himself | compelled to turn to the pratice of med- "icine for a livelyhood, but he had none | of the qualifications of the physician save | good theoretical knowledge of medicine. Consequently he drifted from one town to another in unavailing efforts to find enough patients to make a living. Finally he decided to go West, and settle in Kansas. There bad luck fol- lowed him. i A short time before his bedy was { found in the car in the Pittsburg yards, | he wrote to a friend in Lykens that he | would starve if he remained in the West, {and was determined to work his was { Bast. Nothing was heard of him until the local paper at Lykens printed a ! paragraph stating that a body supposed ! to be that of Dr. Charles H. Miiler,well- known in Lykens, had been found dead lin a freight car at Pittsburg. | By the time the notice was printed | the body had been buried, and no friends | were left with interest enough to investi- | gate the statement. Lately, however, | the wanderings of unfortunate Dr. Mil- { ler have been traced. One of those who 'had a kindly remembrance of other | days, learned how he had left the West for the Kast without money to pay his way or buy food. This gentleman was in Pittsburg to-day. He says no doubt that Doctor Miller got into the car to steal a ride, that the doors were locked, and that before they were opened he had died of starvation. | Tae KN1GHT oF LABOR MAKE THEIR Prarrory.—We are requested by the | K. of L. at this place to give the follow- | ing resolutions, unanimously adopted by | the Bellefonte, Assembly 2383,at its reg- ular meeting held on Monday evening last, a place in our paper : Resolved, That we denounce the bill i now pending in the Senate of the United | State, introduced by Senator Butler, of | South Carolina, as a bill in the interest | of monopoly by working upon the pre- | | i | | judice of the people, and driving the | colored man back to the Republican par- ty and the people of the South to the ! Democratic party ; that speeches being made in Congress upon this bill are for that purpose and nothing else, as the colored people are American citizens, and the law would be unconstitutional. Whereas, There is a growing tenden- cy toward corruption at the pollin this State; and whereas, a free, pure and unbiased ballotis the only safe-guard of | the liberties of the people. Resolved, That we demand a law in- augurating the Australian system of voting, and we especially appeal to all honest and patriotic men, regardless of lure. Wedemand a law prohibiting the using of free railroad passes by any member of the State Legislature, county | or State officers, and judges of the courts of the State. We brand it as a species of bribing against the interests of the people. We demand tue owning, printing and distributing of text-books for the public school of the State; said books to be furnisk ed to the patrons of the schools of the State at actual cost of production. Whereas,the State tinkering of railroad Iaws has not given to the people that re- liet from railroad encroachment desired, in fuet, has only fastened the monopoly and strengthen the positions of corpora- tions ; therefore be it. national control of freight and passenger rates, and ask for an enlargement of the parts of the couniry may receive the same benefits of transportation, and that | the products ot the farm receive the same attention and consideration as me- | { chanical products. Whereas, the present salary and fee { bills governing the salaries of the State and county officers were established at a | time when the products of the farm, fac- {tory and furnace commanded prices I much higher than now ; therefore be it. | Resolved, That we demand the redue- tion of the salaries of all State decline of the prices of farm products. Whereas, the different telegraph com- ' panies of this country have Leen robbing the people of the United States at the | rate of $100,000,000 in the space of twelve years by extortionate charges for invested eapital of less than one fourth of that amount, therefore be it Resolved, That we demand at the hands of the national government the building of a National telegraphic sys- tem to be operated in connection with the post office. . Resolved, That this Assembly favers discharged soldiers and sailors of the | late war. | Resolved, { party, to urge the adoption of this meas- | Interstate Commerce law, whereby all TELE ES Sa TR a eT TN YT ! | i cording to the fullest extent. Resolved, That we declare in favor of | ‘ed it has been learned that the men car- a | went to their cells to die. tv oftaor tonal od ap i of poison which had been smuggled in- county officers, proporiionaly with the | uy the prison was not suiictent to kill | two of those who shared it —Boboikov the transmission ot intelligence, on an | 3 - contains several millions of sinall Ever- a general pension law for all honorably | i and about the same number of Orna- mental Trees and Flowering Shrubs. me £ That a copy of these reso- | | lations be furnished the different news- papers of the county for publication. BRA BE WU EE Tay An Towa Kicker Governor Larrabee, of Towa, who is holding over because of the inability of the Legislature to organize and inuagu- rate Governor-elect Boies, has a poor opinion of Senator Allison and regrets nominate Judge Rothrmek. He Alligon’s election will cost the Republi- cans several Congressmen, declaring that—I have no hesitation that Senator Allison will prove a very serious load for the Republican party this year. the people. He has expressed no sym- of danger to himself. is concerned, there are a score of men i county in Lowa who could fill in every Allison is a eandidate for the | | his shoes. terests to promote his own personal ends. ——The wool failure, for yester- day was at Medwao, Massachusetts. The fatal “rot” which sometimes de- cimates the sheepfold appears to have extended to the woolen mills. The accounts of failures make their appear- ance with almost as much regularity as do the reports ‘of the weather trom the Signal Service Bureau. the Republicans of the State did not’ says | in saying | He has not the confidence of > "other ornamental trees or shrubs, to send pathy with recent lowa movements. ' He hasn't the courage of a mouse. He | has ran and dodged at the least alarm | As far as ability | Presidency and has sacrificed Iowa in- | scandal against him. i at the same time in the courtyard of : the common offender’s pris i ders range all the way {rom one dollar . to one thousand dollars or more each. A | digging and packing season twenty-five Ths Siberian Qutrages. Delicate Women Flogged into Inicon- stonsness— Prisoners Driven to Sut- cide to Escape the Brutality of the Jailors. LoxpoN, Feb. 23.—Further details of | the outrage in the political prison at Kara, Siberia, reached the Russian ex- | iles in London from friends who are lo- | cated a short distance from the scene of | the horrors. They are brief, but con- | clusive, confirming fully a report of the | affair received here from an official in | St. Petersburg who is in sympathy with | the causes of the people. | It appears that the trouble of the Kara prison originated in a “hunger strike” in August, when the women political prisoners tried to starve them- selves to death to escape the brutalities of their jailers. All the women impris- oned there abstained from food for four- teen days. The jailers did not believe that they would be able to keep up the struggle. At first they jeered at the | women, then tempted them with food and then, finding this of no avail, threatened them. When several of the women were at the point of death from starvation the prison officials resorted to artificial means to compel them to take nourishment. The methods adopted, however, were violent and licentious and she women were compelled to abandon their strike. This state of affairs led Mme. Sigida, whose death by flogging has already been announced, to ask for an interview with the director of the prison in hope of se- curing an amelioration of tke condition of the prisoners. This request was granted, but when she was taken before him she found him abusive. It is said that in her exasperation at his abuse she called him a villain and slapped his face. It is not positively known, how- ever, what took place during the inter- view, but whatever did happen Mme. Sigida did not return to her companions. She was taken from the director's ofice and conveyed to the prison in which common offenders were confined. Three of her companions from among the political prisoners were permitted tojoin her. The advices receved state that these were Mary Koalesky, wife of Professor Koalesky, of Kietf'; Mme. Swmirnitsky and Mary Kolujny. The last two ladies were from Odessa. I'wo months elapsed after theseevents before Lieut. Gen. Baron Korff, gover- nor general of the province of the Amour, instructed the directors of pris- ons that thesscret edict of March, 1888, which ordered that political prisoners should be treated by prison officials in precisely the same manner as criminals condemned for common law offenses would be enforced, and ordered the di- rectors to notity the political prisoners of both sexes that they would be liable to cor- poral punishment if they violated certain of the prison regulations. The male prisoners, forseeing immediate danger, held a consultation, and sent to the director of the prison a petition that he | would telegraph to the minister of the interior, at St. Petersburg, requesting him fo suspend the application of the | edict. The director refused to pay any attention to their petition, and thereup- on the men warned him that the first! flogging of a political prisoner would be the signal for the others to commit sui- cide together. . Three days afterward, Lieut. Gen. Baron Kerff'sent a special order direct- ing that Mme. Sigida be punished ac- Mme. Sigida was stripped and received 100 lashes. She was carried off bleeding and in an unconseious condition, and her death ensued trom a rapture of the heart. Her three companions commit- ted suicide within an hour of the time of hearing of Mme. Sigida’s death. The corpses of the four women were buried n. For weeks a cordon of vigilance was so closely maintained around the prison | that nothing was known of what was happening within. Since the secret channel of informatioa has been reopen- ried out their threat of suicide. They met together, and thirty of them shared what poison they could obtain and then The quantity quickly, but in the course of the evening and Kolujny—died. Their convulsions and the dead silence which reigned in the other cells roused the attention of the guards and they immediately sum- moned physicians, who administered emetics to the survivors and endeavored by every means to counteract the effects of the poison. ava EvERGREEN NURSERIES, of Ever green, Wis., claims to be the largest nurs- ery of the class in America. It now rreens, comprising som fifty varieties, These Nurseries now serve about three thousand customers annually, whose or- stenographer and ty pe-writer is employ- ed tor the correspondence. During the to thirty men are employed and about fifteen to twenty are required to take care of the trees during the growing s -a- son. These Nurseries are making a specialty of plants for Evergreen Hedges and have several millions ready for sale, of three or four of the most popular varieties. Their prices on Tree Seedlings are much below any others we have seen. It will pay any of our readers thinking of planting an Evergreen Hedge, or any a postal card to these nurseries asking for their Catalogue. ——————— a A Poor Vindication. It will be remembered that when Grover Cleveland ran for President Rev. | Dr. Bell, of Buffalo, raked together and | published columns of the vilest filth and | For this the New | | York fost characterized him as a “gutter ! snipe,” ete. Bell brought suit against | ' the paper for libel, laying his damages at $25,000. The suit has been pending | ever since until the Tth of this month, | when it was ended by a Buffalo jury | bringing in a verdict of ‘no cause of action.” Thisis a poor vindication for | Dr. Bell. TENET TIE Death of America’s Biggest Millio: aire. John Jacob Astor Leaves His Million’s Behind and Goes to a Land Where Money is of No Account. New York, Feb. 22.—John Jacob Astor, the richest man in America, whose wealth in land in this city and in securi- ties whose values suffer no fluctuations from the stock changes, is placed any- where between $100,000,000 and $150,- 000,000, died to-day,aged 67 years. He left life and his millions behind him at 4 o'clock this morning. Mr. Aster had not been well for some weeks. December 14 he came home from Europe suffering with the grip. Mr. Astor complained yesterday morning that he was feeling poorly, but in the evening he went out to dinner. Soon after his return home he became so ill that his family were greatly alarmed, and sent for their physician. He at once hastened to Mr. Astor's bedside, but when he reached 1t he fonnd his patient already dying. Hardly any pulse was percepti- ble. Mr. Astor continued to sink slow- ly until he died. John Jacob Astor was the son of William B. Astor,” who inherited the bulk of the $20,000,000 fortune left by the orignal John Jacob Astor the grand- father of to-day’s dead. John Jacob Astor the first was born in 1763, the third son of poor peasants, at Waldorf, in Baden, and their name was usually spelled ‘‘Ashdoer.” Indeed, the elder brother of John Jacob the first, signed his name “Henry Ashdoer,” even after he had come to America. John Jacob Astor came to America in 1784, and be- gan with a stock in trade consisting of six fintes and two other musical instru- ments. , He entered the employ of a furrier in this city and in a few months mastered thetrade, which was extremely profitable as carried on with the Indians. Astor visited the Canadian woods, going on foot and carrying in a pack on his back baubles such as delighted the Aborigi- nes He traded them for furs and carried the furs home on his back. He made tu: oney, enlarged his business,using pack-sleds und the like, and in a few years he was doing an immense trade, getting the skins for literally nothing of the Indians and sending them to the Orient, where they were exchanged for most valuable goods, teas, spices, Indian and Japanese silks and the like. The profit averaged $30,000 to every cruise, and when, in 1850, the old man died he left $20,000,000. He founded the Astor Library at the urgent solicitation of Washengton Irv- ing, Fitz Green Halleck and an old and trusted commercial friend. He had been extremely penurious,even to mean- ness, and delighted in saving pennies when he was a millionaire. He had three sons. The first died a babe. Thesecond ramed after him- self, John Jacob Astor, was demented, and was kept.in a fine residence in West {| Twenty-third street at his fathers ex- pense, and after his father’s death on the income of a fund of $100,000 set apart for that purpose. Then John Jacob passed away, aged 60, thirty years ago. The Astor millions had been handed down to a third son, William B. Astor, and he it was who began the movement for better tenement houses in New York. When William B. Astor died he left the vastly increased family for- tune to his eldest son, John Jacob Astor the third, who is now dead Thomas G. Shearman in the Forum for November set down John Jacob Astor’s fortune at $150,000,000, making him the American Croesus. “The Astor” was known for half a century as New York’s landlord. It has been estimated that the estate in- cluded more than a thousand dwelling houses, yielding an average rental of $2,600,000. Democratic and Republican Speakers. Louisville Courier-Journal. The Republican party when in con- trol of the House has chosen the follow- ing Speakers: Sehuyler Colfux, James G. Blaine. Warren Keifer. Thomas B. Reed. The Credit Mobilier scandals drove Schuyler Colfax from public life. The rulings of Mr. Blaine in connec- tion with certain bills before the House cost him the Presidental nomination of his own party three times, and defeated him when nominated. ‘Warren Keifer's conduct in the chair disgusted his own party, and ended his political existence. The Democrats when in control of the House have chosen the following Speakers: Micheal Kerr. Samuel J. Randall. John G. Carlisle. Mr. Kerr died from overwork and the results of a striet performance of his duty. His conduct in the chair won for him the honest praise of friend and foe. Samuel J. Randall was frm courteous and exceedingly jealous of the rights of the mincrity. His conduct reflected high honor on his party. John G. Carlisle presided with the dignity and the impartiality of a judge. No man on the Supreme Bench was ever freer from partisan rulings than was Speaker Carlisle. With Carlisle in the chair it ceased to be a partisan ofiice, and was clothed with the dignity of the judiciary. Mr. Reed iz bent on making a record that will link his name with every deed of violence against the Constitution, and every scheme of corruption directed against the Treasury. His two years in the chair will stand 23 perpetual warn- ing against putting a jestuer in a place of such power. The Democrats can well afford to conduet the Congressional cam- paign in the fall upon the records of the Republican and the Democratic Speak- ters of the House. ——~ VETERAN SoLDIERS who take pride in comardship and soldiership should make a note of the fact that this adminstration, with a soldier at the head of it, takes no note of scars. A Democratic veteran in office has to walk the plank with as little ceremony as if he had never fought for the flagor smelt gunpowder ——TIt isn’t always tha fast giri that cots married first. It is the little demure ¢irl who sits in the corner with one young wan and hangs on to him. -h ' 4 ! vw ~ v | Ld Ag { { ) | | | | { | | | i | «