TRE ITE Deworsaiic Waldinn Terms, 82.00 a Year,in Advance Bellefonte, Pa., March 28, 1890. P. GRAY MEEK, - - - EbIiror. Figures ThatShow the Deception. When we first cailed attention to the fact that the Commissioners statement for the past year omitted items of in debtedness already incurred, which if paid, or deducted, would very mater- iaily lessen the alleged balance in the county treasury, we had no idea it would cause a such troubling of hearts among the Republican managers to ex- plain the matter, nor did we imagine that they would be silly enoagh to plead as an excuse, for what might have been accounted for as an over- sight, that it is not customary or neces - sary to show “contracted ind ebtedness” or known liabilities, to give the tax- payers an idea of the financial condi- tion ot the county. If it is not necessary, as the Republi- can claims, show “contracted indebted - ness” in the county statement, why is there a list of outstanding indebtedness under the head of “Liabilities” pub- lished in each annual statement 2 And if this list of liabilities does not include all known indebtedness, is it not a frand and a deception upon the tax-payers? In the last statement, as certified to by the Commissioners, the outstanding indebtedness as given, under the head of liabilities, including’ commissions for coilections and exonerations of bad taxes, is put at $3,199.69, and yet in less than one month after the publica- tion of that statement, the mouth piece of the Commissioners a! mits that the contract price for erecting the Karthaus bridge was $6,500, on which amount but $400 had been paid, leay- ing a balance of $5,100 of indebtedness on this one bridge alone, of which nothing at all was said, no account taken, and the tax-payers left to be- lieve that nosuch indzbtedness existed. It is the same with the Howard bridge. And yet with a Znown debt of $6,100 on the Karthaus bridge, which is conve- niently dropped in making up the state- ment,and an unsettled account aggregat- ing half that much more, due for work on the Howard bridge, the Commis- sioners published that the ‘estimate expenses for bridges for the coming year is but $5,500, all told. If the statement was not made up to deceive the tax-payers, why was the known indebtedness of the Karthaus bride—$6,100—left out of the liabili- ties entirely, and why was the total estimate of money to be paid out for bridges the present year, fixed at a figure thatlwould not pay the indebt- edness on this one bridge ? Can you make anything else but a clear, clean cut case of deception and fraud of sueh a financial exhibit? De ————————————— Explanations That Need Explaining. Nearly every week since the publi- cation of the commissioners, statement, we have called attention [to the fact of their - being $1,566.60 of state tax, shown to: have been paid into the county, unaccounted for. We have asked an honest, fair explavation of where it was, or what has become of it, and had a right to expect an ex. | plicit and truthful answer, but in, place of this we get fwo explanations which are so utterly at variance with each other, that we are compelled to believe them both the work of some person or persons who know nothing about what they attempt to explain, or else intentionally state what are not facts, in order to further deceive the tax-payers of the county. In the issue of the Republican of March 20th we find the following as an explanation of this matter : “As to the former charge we fail to find “from an examination of the statement, where ‘‘the Warcumax finds the $1,566.60 that it “charges was never paid into the state. “Admitting, however, that it is there, it is very “easily to explain why it was never paid “in. IT HAS NOT YET BEEN COLLECTED.” In its issue of this week the same paper, gives another and entirely dif- ferent explanation of the matter. It says : The amount of State tax levied, not collected, for 1839, was $0125,32. Unecolleated $3337 .89, leaving a balance of $5738,43. There was paid to the State, treasurer's commission and extra clerk hire on account of State tax, $3607,24. This would leave a balance of $2131.19 yet to account for. In addition to the above pay- ments on account of State tax are the following which does not appear on the statement simply because . tha statement is a statement of the ‘Receipts and expenditures of Centre county” and not the receipts and ex- penditures of the State, even in Centre county Abatements on act, of State tax $293,64 Commissions for collecting same 243,65 Assessors pay making assessment 653,0 Exonerations on acct. of State tax 791,86 Total $1982,15. Take $1982,15 from the $2131,19 as above given, and you will find a balance of $149.04, which last and final balance is now in the treasury of Centre county and stands on the books of that office to the credit of the State of Pennsylvania, and which amount can be had whenever the State wants it. Now the question is] which of these two statements does the Republican ex- pect the tax-payers to believe ? It can’t be both, for if this $1.566.60 has not ‘been collected, how could the commis. sion for collecting be charged ap, and “exoneration’” and abatements on ac- count of state tax,sbe made? If it has been collected and the books of the commissioners’officé make the showing the last statement in the Republican as- serts they do, why did not the com- missioner’s statement make the same showing? Why smuggle up these charges amounting to almost $2,000? It will not do to say, as does our neigh- bor, that it “is because the statement is a “statement of receipts and expendi- ture of Centre county” and not the re- ceipts and expenditure of the state, ev- en in Centre county.” Other expendi tures are charged up against this state tax and set forth in the s!atement. Why not the ones just discovered by the Republican ? Are not both these explanations made up specially to cover a mixed up state of matters at the commissioners’ office. Which of the explanations ‘explaing,” and how will our neighbor explain both so that’they will fit? —— A Clear Give Away. From the evidence of a combination oflcircumstances we were led to believe that Me. JaMes MILLIKEN was the auth or of articles that appeared in the Daily News and Republican ofthis place, con- demning Postmaster General Wana- MAKER for his project to make the tele- graph business of the country a part of the post office service, and we said so in our issue of last week in an arficle headed “A Mystery Explained.” In an- swer to this the Daily News had the following paragraph : We have always given the editor of the WarcHnax eredit with possessing considera- ble fore-sight, reasoning and powers of intui- tion, but after reading the first article in third column on fourth page of last week’s paper en- | titled, “A Mystery Explained,” we have come to the conclusion that there is one more weak minded, giddy-headed editor in the world than we thought there was. This piece of foolishness is of no weight in the question, buton Wednes- day morning anincident occurred which confirmed our belief that it is our friend and neighbor, Mr. MiLLikEN, who is throwing hot shot into the post office department through our neighbor's col- umns. The incident to which we refer was the appearance in our sanctum of a colored man who handed us an en- velope well filled with manuscript and directed to Mr. GaTEs, editor of the Daily News, saying that Mr. MILLIKEN had sent it. Seeing that he had made a mistake and got into the wrong shop, we set him right, ard he took it over to the place where it belonged. In the afternoon the Daily News came out with another fierce attack on Wana. MAKER. A man could be hanged on circumstantial evidence iess strong than that, Colonel Ricketts for Governor. T:e Pittston Times claims that Colonel R. Bruce Ricrerts is rapidly gaining strength among the Demo- crats in that section as a candidate for Governor. Upon the ground of his having been a brave soldier in the late war that paper holds that his nomina- tion as the Democratic candidate would at least “test the sincerity of those men who clamor for honor for the soldier.” We are afraid that the class referred to do not care much about honoring the soldier unless there is a contingent ad- | vantage to the Republican party. The regard of that party for the soldier con- sists largely of political selfishness, with humbug as a prominent element. Colonel Ricketts is an excellent citi- zen,a good Democrat, and would make a very reputable candidate, but the fact of his having been a brave soldier would draw but few votes from a party whose Jove for the soldiers is limited to the political use that may be made of them, for which it is willing to give an equivalent in unlimited pensions. ——The New York Sun ridicules HAarrIsoN's ambition to be his own sue- cessor in the Presidency, he being too unpopular with his party to warrant such an ambition. 1t says he hasn't the element of popularity, but “a President of force and popular sym- pathies might disgust the leaders of his party and still be too strong with the people to be set aside for any other can- didate.””—With what accuracy DANA, to whom CLEVELAND is as a red hand- kerchiet to an enraged bull, unintention- ally and unconsciously describes in that paragraph the case of the ex-President. The Boss Report ed to Be in Trouble. There are interesting rumors about Quay. Tt is said that he is coming home in haste from Florida to fix up some weak points in the political fence with which he has corralled the Re- publican party of Pennsylvania. He has heard alarming reports about the i danger that threatens DELAMATER even ! should he be nominated. | This danger does not consist in any ; Republican having the hardihood to run against him after he has been des- ignated as the choice of the Boss, but in thethreat of the Farmers’ Alliance that it will oppose him. Thisorganization of farmers, which is beginning to take an proposes to take a hand in Pennsylva- nia politics, and pretty strong intima- them. It would seem that there is trouble ahead for the Boss. a ———————— Something More About Bad Roads. The bad condition of the country roads which prevailed during the entire winter has not been improved any by the mud that usnally attends the advent of Spring. From all quarters we hear complaint that they were never so bad. are deterred from using their teams for the ordinary purposes of traffic or trav- el, a journey to towa or elsewhere being a task almost impossible to ac- com plish,and thus business of much im- portance to the agricultural interest is greatly impeded. The situation affords a forcible illustration of the disadvan- tage of bad roads, and should serve to induce the adoption of measures that shall furnish the country with roads that can be easily and expeditiously traversed at all seasons of the year. The loss that has been sustained by the farmers during this season of mud ness in consequence of impassable roads, represents a value in money that would go a great way in making the highways what they should be. Of course, as this loss Joes not appear in tangible dollars and cents, it is not sus- ceptible ot proper appreciation, but in the long run it amounts to the same as that much deducted from the profits of the farmer's business. The experience of the past winter should mark the beginning of impros- ed methods in the management of the country roads. But it is not necessary that the turning over of a new leaf should be attended with extravagant expenditure, Makeshifts, cheap at the time, but dear in the end, should be discarded, and what is done should be done thoroughly, with a view of being permanent. It has been found that one side of a road macadamized has afford- ed excellent traveling in muddy weath- er when the other side was completely impassable. No more than this is ne- cessary, as a clay road in dry periods is preferable to a turnpike, affording a smoother avenue of traffic and travel, Several townships. of this county have roads of this character and they an- swer an admirable purpose. There should be more of them. ’ Foolish Impudence. About the most impudent thing that has come under our observation in many a day is the charge made by the Republicans that the Democrats have gerrymandered Ohio. They speak of it as a wrong unparalleled in the po- litical history of the State, and their tone would lead the uninformed to be- lieve that the highly moral leaders of their party would rather sacrifice their precious lives than to do so wicked a thing as to gerrymander. There is an extent to which impudence may go without stultification, but this Republi- can fuss aboutthe unfair redistricting of Ohio exhibits as great a lack of sense as of shame, in view of the fact that the new apportionment is merely the cor- rection of an outrageous gerrymander by which the Democrats, within a few thousand of being equal in number to the Republicans, were allowed to elect but five of the twenty-one Ohio Con- gressmen. ! Unfair and unequal apportionment should not be resorted to by any party, gerrymandering being a vicious prac tice that should be abandoned as an- tagonistic to the principle of popular representation, but when the Republi cans show a sample of guilt in this re- spect such as was presented in Ohio, and exists at this time in Pennsylvania where it has been so managed that 526,091 Republicans elect 21 congress- men and 446, 633 Democrats elect but 7, therr whining about the Damoeratic gerrymander in Ohio displays an ex- tent of cheek that is immeasurable, A Democratic Council. At a meeting of prominent Democrats of Pennsylvania drawn together last week in Philadelphia to consult on the political situation, matters pertaining to the good of the party and the exi- gencies of the coming campaign were considered. It was an assemblage of counsellors and not of bosses, consisting of congressman MuTcHLER, of North- ampton county, Hon. Wa. L. Scott, of Erie, State Senator Ross, of Bucks, ex- State Senator EckLey B. Coxg, of Lu- zerne, W. U. HeNsEL, of Lancaster, ex Postmaster Harriry, of Philadelphia, BexsaMinF, Meyers, of Harrisburg, an 1 Jory B. Reap of Philadelphia. The subject of the nomination of Gov- ernor was considered without any dis- position to dictate the choice that should made. Ten or twelve names were mention- active part in polities in the South, ed in this connection, but no one of (he gentlemen present was committed to any particular candidate. Looking so far ahead as 1892, there was a remark- i Ln : | able unanimity in regarl to the Presi- | tions have been made that DELAMATER, | as a corporation man, would not suit ! The residents of the country districts | through the interruption of their busi- ! dential candidate, all being in favor of Grover CLeveLanp. In respect to the Democratic State Convention this year, the prevailing sentiment was fa- vorable to calling it at an early date. Starving Miners, More Tales of Suffering and Destitution Jrom Seranton. SCRANTON, Pa., March 24.—A shad- ow blacker than anthracite is extending its phantasmal proportions through all the coal regions of Pennsylvania. It is the shadow of want, and its baleful in- fluence is felt in hundreds of homes | throughout the mining valleys of the Keystone state. Mr. B. G. Morgan, of Hyde Park, a prominent member of the releif com- mittee, says that the destitution is be- yond description. He tells of a man who went to a storekeeper and begged to be trusted for a sack of flour. The storekeeper said he could not afford to give any more trust. When the man was going away he seized and carried off one of the sacks of flour which he found outside the door. The storekeeper was informed of the occurrence a few minutes later and hastened to the man’s home. There he saw a sight which touched him to the heart. The sack of flour lay open on the floor and the poor man’s children were sitting around it helpiag them- selves to its contents with spoons. Stories of distress all along the min- ing hamlets of the region are numerous and well authenticated, and the worst feature is that there does not seem to be a silver lining to the cloud which hangs over the coal trade. A Tramp's Good Fortune. He Receives a Legacy of $10,000 and Returns to the Tramps’ Retreat. West Cresrer, Pa., March, 25.— Jessie Matlack is a well-to-do-farmer living about four miles from this place. On his farm is a large stone barn, which is the rendezvous of many tramps, who make it a sleeping place.” A few nights ago Mr. Matlack was called to the door by a loud knock. He answered the summons and found two men there, who asked if there was a large barn in the neighborhood in which tramps slept. Mr. Matlack answered that his barn was probably the one meant. The men said they were looking for a tram named Jack Murphy. Mr. Matlack lighted a lantern and went with them. They went to the haymow, and after calling several times for Murphy a rag- ged, miserable looking fellow "crawled out from under the hay. “Are you Jack Murphy ?” asked one of the men. He was. = “Then come along with us. Your uncle in Philadelphia has died and left you $10,000 This announcement made Murphy open his eyes to their widest extent and brought out of the hay a half dozen more tramps as ragged as Jack himself, Jack went with the men, who proved to be lawyers’ clerks, and true enough got his $10,000. But he did not desert his companions at Mr. Matlack’s barn. He roosts with them as usual. ET —— A Letter from Mr. Cleveland. The students of the Ohio State Univer- sity held a Democratic National Mock Convention, and nominated Hon. Grov- er Cleveland and Governor James E. Campbell for President and Vice Presi- dent respectively: The nominees were informed, through a committee, of the convention’s action. The following re- ply has been received from Mr. Cleve- lard : New York, March 20, 1890, To Mr. W. H. Clarke. DEAR Siw : I received the dispatch signed by you and others with pleasure, as aL evidence of friendship and kind- ness which caused me gratification, but 1 know that you will not fail to under- stand me when I essay that I am sure that there are questions and topics which press upon the minds of our people, the solution and treatment of which are of vastly greater importance than the political fortunes of any man. I do hope that the students of the University of Ohio will appreciate this tact, and will see their full measure of political duty inlaboring to enforce the doctrines of true Democracy and in retrieving the people from the delusions which beset them to their undoing. Thanking you and your associates for the kind expressions contained in ‘your dispatch, I am, Yours, very truly, “GROVER CLEVELAND.” e— The Montana Fraud. Philadelphia Record. Ir has seemed good to the majority of the United States Senate Committee on Privilege: and Elections to report that Messrs. Saunders and Power, Repub- licavs, were duly elected Senators from Montana. This report will carry con- viction to no one. Republican partisans may applaud the authoritative declara- tion of the majority ot the committee, but the Democrats will always believe that they have been cheated and de- frauded out of two Senators. In any event, the pitiful and contemptible spe- cial pleading of the majority of the Sen- ate Committee will unquestionably be estimated at its true value by the indig- nant people of Montana. The public interest in this flagrant crime against popular suffrage consists, after all, in its direction of popular attention toward the open Et violation in the various States of the laws regulating the election of United States Senators. There are too many clouded titles in the upper branch of Congress. Where the law-giving fountains should flow the purest,its waters are most brackish and defiled. Some other and better method of choosing United States Senators is imperatively demanded by public senti- ment. The system which has resulted in creating at the Capital a club of millionaires and rotten-borough spoils- men cannot much longer be tolerated, .| candidate for the nomination for Gover- Mothers of Soldiers. The Woman's Relief Corps of Penn- sylvania wish to ascertain as soon as possible how many widows and mothers of soldiers, sailors or marines of the late war,or disabled veterans with their wives, are inmates of charitable institutions of the State, or receiving aid from poor boards in counties where there are alms- houses, so that they may gather into the Pennsylvania Memorial Home at Brookville all who are eligible to be re- ceived into that institution. If these re- ports are made to the nearest Corps of W. R. C. they will at once be forwarded to the proper authorities and receive at- tention. What the Deficit Will Be. ‘When ex-Speaker Carlisle’s statement Was published recently that the ap- propriations which the Republicans of this Congress intended making would cause a deficiency in the treasury at the end of the next fiscal year, Mr. Can- non, chairman of the House committee un appropriations, stated that it was a misrepresentation made for political | effect. Now as good a Republican as | Senator Hawley states on the floor of the | Senate that the appropriations to be made for the next fiscal year ageregate $523,000,000 against an estimated re venue of $450,000,000, making a deficit of $73,000,000. Certainly Mr. Hawley was not talking for political effect. | { The Ever Growing Burden, | | Think of this, ye tax-payers, says Pomeroy’s Advance Thought, “thirteen | vears after the war of the Rebellion end- | ed, the pension. list required for one | year was $26,000,000. The coming year $96,000,000 are to be taken from the people to be given to the army of pensioners who appear to be increasing i cach year. And yet the poor farmer | who cannot get out of debt, and the mechanic who is at the mercy of the usurer, goes right on down hill to his grave, leaving his children in bondage. How - strange it is that American sovereign citizens, each of whom is a king in his own right, should preter the taxation, dishonor, poverty, bondage and death, to organization and protec- tion of all who live by honest industry.” BE a—— Harrison's Southern Policy. Nashville American. The appointments made in the South- ern States have, to a great extent, beensuch as would never have been even suggested in any community north of Mason and «Dixon's line. ~ The most disreputable and notorious rascals, men without intelligence, without character —except bad character—without the re- i spect of any decent man in the commun- ity, have been chosen to fill offices of their@orn, great importance and responsibility. Feder: 1 judges, United States marshals, | postmasters without number, have been | chosen without any other reference to | their fitness except their unfitness. A | judge and a marshal who conspire to | pack juries to secure convictions without | regard to law, who prostitute the ma- | chinery of the law to hound and perse- cute their personal and political enemies, would not be tolerated anywhere in the North; nor would the President dare to outrage public sentiment by such ap- pointments. ; Solid for Cleveland, Lock Haven Democrat. As we mentioned yesterday the confer- ence of Democratic leaders in Philadel- phia was solid for Cleveland as the next Democratic nominee for the Presidency. This, we think, is the general sentiment of the masses everywhere, although it may possibly not suit some of the poli- ticians. But the man who led in the at- tack upon the high war tariff and struck such a vigorous” blow that the whole edifice of high tariff wickedness rdcked and trembled, is the man to whom ought to be confined the task of finishing the great work for the emancipation of the people from the tyranny and outrage that have been practiced upon them. Let the entire Democratic host, mighty in number and powerful in sentiment for effectual and permanent tariffreform, _shout for Cleveland from one end of the country to the other, and in 1892 there will be no difficulty in restoring to his proper place in the White House the great President who was only displaced by the corrupting use of hundreds of thousands of dollars and the basest treachery of pretended friends. Let the Democratic masses avenge this out- rage upon them and him. EE Don’t Borrow Presidential Troubles. Philadelphia Times. It is intimated that the contest for the Democratic nomination for Gover- nor in Pennsylvania is likely to be a contest for the supremacy of the friends of Cleveland or the friends of Hill, as a preliminary skirmish for the Presiden- tial nomination in 1892. It is intimated also that Democratic political leaders are making the guber- natorial battle with the view of control- ling the patronage of the next President, if a Democrat, rather than with the view of electing a Governor. It would be well for leaders who are involved in any such movements not to borrow Presidential troubles just now. Besides, there couldn’t be any greater waste of time and effort. If an avowed Cleveland man were nominated for Gov- ernor, it wouldn’t put Cleveland a whit nearer the nomination in 1892, and if an avowed Hill man were nominated, it wouldn’t give Hill the shadow of a chance for the national nomination. The next Democratic candidate for President woa’t be decided by the suc- cess or defeat of any faction in Penn- sylvania. If the occasion shall call for Cleveland, a solid delegation against bim from this State wouldn’t make a i ripple in the strife ; and solid de'e ‘ations for Hill from both New York and Penn- sylvania wouldn’t make him seriously thought of as a national candidate. Don’t borrow Presidential troubles. It is bad policy for any party, and it would be next to certain to defeat any nor, and would be absolutely certain to defeat him at the election.” When the people of Pennsylvania went to elect an honest reform Governor, they won't want a mixture of Presidential monkey- i ing in the effort. Look to the election | “of a Governor this year and don’t borrow |! Presidential troubles. Senator Voorhees Scores the Thieves’ Tariff, Last Monday in speaking on his re- solution for an inquiry into the cause of the existing agricultura! depression, Sen- ator Vorkees, of Indiana, spoke of the deep, strong current of anxiety, discon- tent and alarm prevailing in the furm- ing communities, and said that he pro- posed to aid ‘them in the injuiry as to the causes of the existing depression. It was now nearly thirty years since the close of a terrible war had given to unhallowed avarice an opportunity to prey upon the selt-sacrificing patriots of the country, such as had never before been presented to the basest passions and the most sordid and odious” vice. The measures then resorted to for the taxa- tion of one class of citizens and for the enrichment of enother class, hud been the legislation by which the burden of the public debt had been doubled, silver demonetized, and a high protective tariff established. He characterized the protective tariff a as curse and nota blessing. He was dealing not with a theory, but with a condition, which even a blind man could look at and draw from 1t an unerring conclusion. The farmers of the United States to-day did not receive on an aver- age more then 10 cents a bushel for 50 cents for their wheat, and from 2 to 3 cents a pound for their hogs. The time would come, at no distant day, when the faraer would look on the proposition to tax him and his wife and children for the protection and benefit of other people beside himself as he would look on a law of Congress to establish the army worm and weevil in his wheat, to infest his cattle with mur- rain and his hogs with cholera. Every pretence of a home market for the farmer was a fraud, and every pre- terce of taxing wheat, oats and pota- toes for his benefit was a cheat and a sham. Ttis a notorious and self-evident truth that the tariff, as it now stood, in- creased the farme:s’ expense account from 35 to 100 per cent on every imple- ment of industry with which he toiled ; and last year binding twine had been enchanced eighteen cents a pound by the tariff and Twine Trust. He did not be- lieve that the hands of the farmer would hold a Republican ticket at the next Presidential election. He declared that not only had there been no increase in the value of land for the last quarter of a century, but there had been an absolute loss of 33 per cent. If the improved farm lands of the United States werd put to sale to-day under the most favorable circumstances, they would not (he said), on a gener= al average, realize more than two-thirds of what their value had been twenty- five years ago. The farms of the State of Ohio were now under mortgage to the amount of $300,000,000. In the State of Illinois things were no, better— the mortgage in that State amounting to $402,000.000. Twenty-three per cent, of the whole face of the State of Illinois was under mortgage The State of Michigan was still worse. Forty-seven per cent. of the whole sur- face of that State was under mortgage. In the States of Indiana, Kentucky, Missouri, Kansas, Towa, Nebraska and the whole Northwest from 20 to 50 per cent. if the farm lands was under mortgage at such rates of interest as the farmers could never pay out of their crops, to say nothing of the principal. The farmers were thus brought face to face with the loss of their homes-—with ruin—and hundreds of thousands of them were standing in that attitude at the present day and hour. In thy face of such appalling facts, who,he asked, would eulogize the work- ings and results of a system of tarifi protection which had for a continuous term of twenty eight years accomplished nothing save the concentration and amassment of wealth in the hands of a few protected people? He went on to speak of the recent Carnegie banquet in Washington. That banquet brought to his mind the feast of Belshazzar. His earnest prayer and beliet was that the handwriting on the wall of the Carnegie banquet would presage the overthrow of a system of extortion and robbery more wicked in the sight of God and man than all the sins of Babylon ‘when her robes were scarlet with iniquity. Summing up, he said. “In the face of these things (referring to the subsidiz- ing of the press, the perchasing of votes in ‘‘blocks of five,” official patronage, etc.) and with » full knowledge of what is before us, ws will gird up our loins like men and go forward to the fight. The battle may be long and weary, but the sun will go down on a great and final victory of the eternal right over legalized wrong, of freedom and equality over caste. ‘‘Hail, mighty day of the swifting coming future.” EE —————— The Pension Situation. New York Commercial Advertiser. ‘We cannot repeat too often that the Urion soldiers were poorly paid and that patriotism was the main motive for enlistment. We cannot repeat too of- ten that we believe in a pension system which shall compensate the soldiers gen- erously for services rendered and for in- juries received. Such a system would be equally to the honor of the nation which gave and the veterans who receive. But the surplus squandering legislation now proposdd,would be as disgraceful as it would be disastrous. With these bills pushed through the bounty and nsion record would stand as fol- OWS : Total... ernerennnnnenene.. $5,270,000 000 The Grand Army cannot afford to have it said that in freeing the slaves they de- livered over the whole nation into’ per- petual bondage. — Probability of a Long Session. Boston Herald. There isn’t much of a chance that Congress will adjourn before the dog days, if it does then. There are thirteen Democrats yet to be deprived of the seats to which they have been elected, and this promises to absorb all the ener- gies of the average partisan membar for a good while yet. It is a pretty small business, but it seems to flourish all the same, '