Terms 82.00 A Year,in Advance Bellefonte, Pa., November 28, 1890. P. GRAY MEEK, Epitor Expressions of Hostility. se The Philadelphia Press allows con- siderable latitude to dissatisfied Repub- licans who want to “speak out in meet- ing” against the re election of CAMERON to the United States Senate. There have been quite enough expressions of dissent to show that the party is by no means a unit in regarding the senior Senator is indispensable to the State and the country in a senatorial capaci- ty. Enough is being said to indicate a very extensive opinion that it is about time for him to step down and out of a position in which he has been neither useful nor ornamental. One of the Press's correspondents, writing from the insurrectionary re- gion of Bradford, where Senator Eu- ERY has his dwelling place, doesn't mince matters in expressing his oppo- sition to Cameron's candidacy for a re-election. The following is a sam- ple of his dissent : We want a man with some soul and earnest- ness. Neither CameroN nor Quay, has repre- sented this State, but unfortunately we can’t reach the latter. A large majority of the Re- publicans are opposed to CAMERON'S re-elec- tion, and were it submitted to a popular vote he would be almost lost sight of; as it is, no- thing but money will do it. Every member who votes for him should be spotted. The party has already suffered severely from the actions of “bosses,” and the sooner it gets rid of Cameron and a few such the bet- ter it will be for it. There are some who believe that there is a quiet but systematic work going on to defeat CAMERON by induc- ing a sufficient number of members to refuse to participate in. the caucus nomination, and, by their staying out and defeating an election, compel the abandonment of CAMERON, as OLIVER was abandoned in 1881 and MiTcHELL elected. But there is reason to regard such an expectation as visionary. CAMERON'S grip on the party, although greatly relaxed, is in all probability strong enough for another term in the Senate. ——The Democrats of Maine are encouraged by the hope that the next Legislature of that State will pass an Australian ballot law. The people are calling ‘or it loudly and it is scarcely possible that the Republicans will be deaf to a demand that is being made with such emphasis. With a reformed ballot law the Kittery navy yard would lose much of its political usefulness. It Will Be an Interesting Fight. There is going to be a big time and a lively fight when the Republican Legislature shall get together for organization next January. The row is going to be over the election of a Speaker. Magee, flushed with the defeat of Quay, wants to exert a pre- dominant influence in organizing the House. He will have his candidate for Speaker who wiil not be the candi- date of the Boss whom he helped to hum- ble at the recent election. The antagon- ism of that contest will be carried into the fight for the speakership, making it extremely interesting to those who will not be in it and whose heads will not be targets for the blows given and taken. MaceE has a right to claim preced- ence over QUAY in the control of the coming Legislature. He was the vie- tor 1 the fight with che Boss, and the victor should have the spoils. He may justly regard Quay’s interference with the speakership as a piece of pre- sumption on the part of a politician who was subjected to such complete condemnation at the polls. He is de- termined to thoroughly humiliate his foe. Itis understood to be his purpose to succeed Quay in the Senate, and therefore it is his determination to stop the Boss at once from exercising any influence over the State Legisla- ture. This fight will put CaMeroN in a dilemma. The conflict between Ma- GEE and Quay is irreprescible, but his ambition to succeed himself as Sena- ator uveeds the support of both; he cannot afford to offend either of them. CAMERON'S sympathies are evidently with Mager, and in the speakership fight he may vet discover it to be his advantage to allow his influence to g» with his sympathies. ——And now it is reported through the authority of the New York World that Carrey Ross has tound. He turns up, accor ling wo the World's statement, in the person of a Bowery boy who knows his parentage hut has lost the natural feeling for his parents. If it is really CHARLEY he is nov near- ly 21 years of age, and a rougn ~peoi- men of young manhood. been SASS ——— ——=Send two dollars and get the WarcnMaN. A Revolationary Project. It is to be hoped that the Republi- cans of New Hampshire will not suc- ceed in robhing the Democrats of a Governor and United States Sena- tor which the result of the recent election has legitimately given them. There was no election of Governor by the people, and according to the pecu- liar law of the State the Legislature will have to elect that officer. This duty is to be performed by the next Legislature, the majority of which has been elected by the Democrats. It is the purpose of the Republicans to overcome the Democratic majority in the incoming Legislature by induc- ing the Governor to call the old Legis- lature together which would take upon itself the power of determining the membership of the new Legislature, the object being to throw out enough Democratic members to make it a Re- publican body. It would then pro: ceed to elect a Republican Governor and United States Senator. This is clearly a revolutionary project. It proposes to trench upon the rights and functions of the new Legislature in controversion of the rule that every legislative body is the proper judge of the qualifications of its own members. It should be, ard we trust will be, suc- cessfully resisted. Compulsory Voting. Among the election reforms talked of is one to be brought about by a law compelling the citizen to exercise his right of suffrage. If he fails to cast his vote it is proposed to subject him to a penalty. How it wonld work in this free and independent country is problematical. But in Canada they are going to try compulsory voting, a bill to that effect having been brought before the legislative council. By the terms of the proposed bill those who are on the voting list wili be required to vote. Their failure to do so will be published. Ifwithin 60 days the de- linquent shall not give satisfactory rea- son for not doing his duty as a vater, he shall be disfranchised by having his name stricken from the voting list. This is the penalty, but citizenship may be restored on payment of $25, which is practically a fine to that amount, This measure is intended to provide against a form of hribery in which a voter may accept a bribe to stay away from the polls. The Australian ballot system provides for every other form of election bribery, and it may take a compulsory ballot law in addition to wipe out that evil entirely. Delayed Benefits. There has been a perceptible increase in the price of many different commo- dities since the new tariff went into op- eration. In the aggregate the increase of cost to the consumers is material. To compensate workingmen for this addition to their expenses there is no addition to their wages. This practi- cally amounts to a redaction wages, a result that is quite different from the idea which has been inculcated that the increase of the tariff was intended for the benefit of the wage-earner. Two dollars a day earned by labor suffers a shrinkage in consequence of the increased price of necessaries,which virtually means just that much taken off the compensation of the laborer. If this increase of the tariff is really intended to benefit the workingmen, their wages should be advanced so as to at least cover the increased cost of living brought about by the McKinley bill. The protected manufacturers should not hesitate in giving such an illustration of the beneficent eftects of a bigh tariff upon the well being of the working people. EHO ete OEE The Guardsmen Not Likely to Be There. It isn’t probable that the National Gua:d of Pennsylvania will take part in the inauguration of Governor Parri- son. The attendance of the military force of the State at the inaugural cere- monies has been offered by Governor B aver, but from the well known dis- position ot his successor to avoid dis- pay there is nothing to encourage the expectation that there will be a milita- ry pageant when Governor ParTisoN shall be sworn into office. Besides, the guardemen are not anxious to take part in such a demonstration, which will come off at a season that is often severely cold. They have a bitter re- collection of what they endured at the inanguration of Governor BrAvVER four years ago, when all of them really suf- fered, and some cases of sickness were contracted that terminated fatally. There was an experience almost as bad at the inauguration of President HARRISON two years later. On such an occasion, when ‘the weather is severe civilians in attend- ance can accommodate themselves to the situation, but the militia have no discipline requiring them to face and endure the severity of the weather. No doubt there will be more of a de- monstration at Governor PATTISON'S second inauguration than there was at his first, but it is not probable that the military will take part in it, and the reason for their absence will be a very good one. I (A A Race for Riches. It is nip and tuck between Jay Gourp and JouN ROCKEFELLER in the race for the distinction of being the richest man in the world. ROCKEFEL- LER, through the absorbing power of the Standard octopus, has sucked in a hundred and fifty millions, ana this suction is said to be going on at the rate of ten millions a year. The natural resources of the oil re- gion furnish the petroleum devil-fish with its prey, but it is from the rail- roads that the great vampire of the New York stock market draws the blood that is swelling ic to colossal proportions. GouLp, it is believed, made many millions in the recent stock panic when the best securities ran down to panic prices and his ready money enabled him ‘o scoop in the bonanzas with which Wall street was literaily strewd. It is estimated that his recent exploit increased his ownership of stock to 1,000,000 shares and gave him control of the leading railroad systems of the West. With such neans of plunder GouLp is in a situation to make his accumulations surpass the spoil which ROCKEFELLER secures from a monopoly of the coal oil trade. Oar learned contemporary, the Philadelphia Record, errs somewhat 10 saying that “a girl of 13 succeeds to the throne of WiLLiaym the Silent.” The great founder of the Dateh com- moawezalth never had a throne, nor did any of his successors to the title and dignity of the House of Orange possess such a monarchical piece of furniture until the Netherlands converied into a kingdom after the fall of NaproLeoN. A Datch Stadtholder or Grand Pensionary had as little use for a throne as has a President of the United States. was The police force has carefully counted the inhabitants of Brooklyn, New York, and finds them to be 853,- 943. PorTER'S census returned them as being slightly in excess of 808,000. A discrepancy of 45,000 shows that somebody made a mistake, and Por- TER refuses to go over the count again lest 1t might be shown that the mis- take was his. Surprise in a Rum Barrel. European Edition of the N. Y. Herald. M. Lebon,a wine merchant of Nancy, sent a barrel of rum to a friend at Marsal on Saturday last. His friend was pleased. He licked his lips, rolled his eyes and patted the dower front portion of his anatomy softly and with an air of exceeding comfort. He lost no time in trying a sample of the new arrival, but there was a flavor about it which puzzled hir: greatly. He tasted it again and it seemed queerer than ever. Determined to solve the mystery he took out the head of the cask, and his horror may be conceived when he found the cask contained all that was mortal of Mme, Lebon, who had disappeared mysteriously three weeks before. To set the police after M. Lebon was the work of a moment, but when they ar- rived they found he had already done justice on himself. Four workmen and two relatives have been arrested on sus- picion of being concerned in the crime. A Remarkable Canal. The most remarkable canal in the world is the one between Worsley and St. Helens, in north England. It is six- teen miles long and underground from end to end. a Lancashire the coal mines are very extensive, balf the coun- try being undermined. Many years ago the managers of the Duke of Bridge water’s estates thought they could save money by transporting the coal under- ground insiead of on the surfice ; there- fore the canal was constructed, and the mines connected and drained at the same time. Ordinary canalboats are used, the power being furnished by men. The tunnel arch over the canal is pro- vided with cross pieces, and the men who do the work of propulsion lie on their backs on the loads of coal, and push with their feet against the cross bars of the roof.—St Louis Republic. The Preacher Got the Worst of It. LoxpoN, November 23.—1In the Ita- lian Catholic church, at Hatter Garden to-day, the rector, Rev. Mr. Bauning, took occasion to denounce Parnell, whereupon several members of the con- gregation left the church. A scene of great disorder ensiied, the people shou t- ing, ‘Mind: yours! own: bosiness,”’ “Leave politics alone,” etc. On leaving | the church Father Banning was attack- | ed by a crowd and was struck several: | times. He was escorted home by the police, who had great difficulty in pro- tecting him. Protectionist Aphorisms. “A cheap coat argues a cheap man in- side the coat.”’— William McKinley. “Cheap necessaries of living make ‘cheap men.” —=Henry Cabot Hodge. “When a man cannot own two coats under this tariff, let ‘him content: him- self with one coat.” —Jay Gould. “A tariffis not a tax,”’—The Tarif liberty of action, their regulations and Majority in Congress. i inch longer than the other. The Veteran Legion. The following, extracted: from the Grand Army Gazette and Nationa Gardsman, has been handed us for publication by a Bellefonte veteran who was not a coffee-cooler. We can readily endorse the sentient it expresses : The “Union Veteran Legion” is an organization of comparctively recent or- igin. But its growth has been steady and rapid, and its prosperity is continually increasing. From its membership all are debarred who carnot show at least two years honorable service, and men- tioned prior to July, 1863, or a discharge for wounds received in the pursuance of duty. Coftee-coolers, 30-day drafted men, or substitutes, and those who never smelled gunpowder, can find no en- trance into this honorable order com- pused solely of veterans who went to the front without the promise of a boun- ty or any hope of pecuniary reward. Nor can any wan whose military or civil record is stained hope to gain ad- mission into the ranks of the Union Veteran Legion. It seeks to fill its ranks from the young enthusiastic, coun- try-loving patriots of twenty-eight years ago, and who rushed to the front to save the life of the nation. They are the he- roes who did not go to Canada, or look for substitutes, or wait until the offer of a big bounty allured them from thier homes. In short they are the lower of the Union Army of long ago. There are many other banded organi- zations of alleged soldiers, but none can compare with the Veteran Legion. In the Grand Army, for instance, any man who was mustered into the service of the United States for one day only, and was honorably discharged, stands on a par with the vetetan of three or four years service and the hero of a hundred battiefields. Other organizations dare not discriminate by grading comrades of whom they are composed, nor can they afford to permit the wearing of a service badge. ~ Ifthey allowed this, dis- cord and dissension wonld be the im- mediate result between the long and short term men. The Union Veteran Legion alone offers a place in its ranks for every genuine veteran, and every old soldier or sailor with a record of which he is proud should promptly seek admission. Comrades desiring to organ- izea Union Vetearn Legion Encamp- ment can communicate with Dr. G. J. R. Miller, National Commander, 1769 Frankford Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. The Union Veteran Legion is not made up of men who fought for money rather than the country, nor does it take into its membership men of this charac- ter. It is not true that the Legion an- tagonizes the G. A R.—it simply distin- guishes between those who can truly be classed as veterans and those who are not. Nor will it do for the G. A. R, to oppose the U. V. L., for if there should be an exodus of genuine veterans from the former to the latter, the remaining members of the Grand Army would not feel very proud of the attitude in which they were placed. In such an event the wearers of the round lapel button of the G. A. R. would cut a sorry figure in comparison with the veterans who sport- ed the chield of the U. V. L., denot- ing at least two years of service unless sooner discharged for honorable wounds received in the discharge of duty. That there were thousands of patriotic boys who could not, on account of there age, gain admission in the army in ’61 and 62, and who did succeed in enlist- ing '63 and ’64, is a well known fact. It is unfortunate that this class of worthy men are debarred from admis- sion to the ranks of the Veteran Legion. However, such is the fact. It is an iron clad organization as regards its laws, and it is impossible to become a member except the applicant can fur- nish positive official proof of his having enlisted before the days of drafts and bounties,and served continuously for two years at the front, Eligible veretans in this county will be furnished with applications for mem- bership by writing to Encampment No. 59, Bellefonte, Pa.—[Cor. WATCHMAN. Art of the Tailor. “No two men, even of exact height and weight,” said a prominent New York tailor the other day, ‘‘can wear the same clothes and be fit. If the measurement were exactly the same, which it never is, they couldn’t do it. Why? Now, I don’t know. ButlI have found it to be a fact. The meas- urement for a pair of trousers, for in- stance, might be exactly the same, yet one man will have to be allowed from one to three inches more length in the leg than the other. The man who is naturally stout or fat, and the man who has grown fat late in life, may look and even measure actually alike, but the same cut of cloth will never fit both. Herein lies the great art of tailoring. The variations in the construction of the human body are marvellous. Now, the man who just left—he is a minister of the Gospel, He must have clothes to fit him and fic his business. His arm pit, shoulder blades and arms do not cor- respond with those of any other man ; nor does the right side correspond with | the left. He probably gestures a good | deal more with his right hand. He doesn’t know that that arm is fully an | This strue- tural difference in men is more general than you would imagine.” — Pittsburg Dispatch. | Sullivan as a Bruiser. TauxNtToN, Mass. November 22.— John L. Sullivan and Duncan B. Har- rison, with other members of their com- | | | ‘pany, came to this city yesterday. Sul- livan celebrated in his usual manner, | "after having been treated like a nabob by the sports of the city, and nearly | broke his neck by falling through a win- dow of the City Hotel: During the af- ternoon he varied the monotony by kicking Harrison in the back, injuring him so that he could. not appear at the | evening performance, while the latter | was attended by three doctors Harri- | son went to, Boston to-day, and it is fear | but the chances ave it will. — Washing - | men W ed that his spine is injured. leveland’s Tariff Reform Anticipated. b2en called to a ; the Our attention has published communication in reform very much as it was afterward s expressed in Cleveland's celebrated Message. Since Cleveland's position on thatsabject has been so emphatically sustained by the people, the communi- cation anticipating his doctrine and pol- icy bacrmes an article of much interest, and therefore we give it as follows : “FOR REVENUE ONLY.” Eprror REpuBLIcan : The elections are now overaud each party, Democrats, Republicans, Prohibition znd Green- back, may be said to have held their ground. But as long as New York ans can never elect another President. The President should now enforce the Civil Service Reform so far as to see that competent and honest men are put in public position ; but they stiould 1n- variably be Democrats. It is to be hoped that he will, in his forthcoming message, open up the Tariff question, for there is no subject that the Amer- ican people are so much in need of edu- cation as on that question ; and it is to be hoped that the incoming Congress will agitate and debate the issue so as to enlighten the people, because it is their true interest. The first question in my opinion, to be done, is for Congross to revise, adjust and equalize the tariff law and then commence with a horizontal reduction of from flve to ten per cent. annually until we get down to a strictly revenue basis. ness interests of the country would pec: haps be too great to reduce the tariff’ to a revenue husis at once,but we have the example of England before us, in repeal- ing their Corn Laws by an annual 7e- duction, as well as the act of our own country when there was a horizontal reduction of five, or ten per cent. of the tariff of 1882. This plan gives the busi- ness of the country time to assimilate and adapt itseif to the change. I am like you, Mr. Editor ; I think the Internal tax on whisky should be allowed to re- main, as this tax can be avoided by any one without any detriment to themsel- ves or violatingany laws, and the neces- saries of life should be left free, or as nearas may be. After securing what revenue we can from this source, then the balunce of the wants of the Govern- ment should be raised from the imports into the country, and as soon as a reve- nue basis is reached, thea the reduction indicated should cease. The Secretary of the Treasury should be given discre- tionary power in the matter,and when t! e wants of the Government can afford it, he to have the power to add or reduce five, or ten per cent, as the case may be. sure source of ra'sing revenue, and at the same tine be a check upon anv sur- plus revenue piled up in the Treasury. While I would start down Ail in the way of a reduction of the tariff, I would also start up hill in the way of progress, and in the course of four or five years the country would be down to a strict- ly revenue basis, and the change would be so gradual that business would not feel it. When we are once rightly start- ed on this basis or business highway, all the industries of the country would be- come active and our goods and wares would find a market in all parts of the world. Then labor would be in demand, particularly expert labor, and wages would advance. This would be the re- verse of the present infamous system of taxing everything. Our imported raw material being loaded down with a duty, when the articles are ready for market they are driven out ot the markets of the world by England,France, Belgium, Germany, etc., by reason of their low- er prices for the sane articles. Here is where the over production comes in. This leaves us no markets but our own people. And with all the new im- provements in machinery our manufac- turers can produce in siz months all the market will take up in twelve months. This forces us to shut down for six months of the year. and consequently the laborer is thrown out of employment and the faults and crimes of idleness are entailed, while with the other, or Dem- ocratic common sense system, we have the World for a market. And being able to compete With any nation on earth, our industries would ve employ- ed all the year. This system wo uld bring us back to 1850—1860, when you could count the millionaires on the ends of your fingers, while in twenty years’ rule of the Republicans we count them by hundreds. It took centuries to build up the millionaires of Europe, with the aid of entailment laws to keep the land in the hands of the few. But in the United States in twenty years they grow up like mushrooms. This all same about by false legislation in favor of the rich, or in other words; a Protective tariff which its advocates glgim protects the laboring man. It does pro- ‘tect him in one thing. He will pot be bothered with ‘much of this world’s ‘goods to look after should the Demo- crats pursue the Republican policy of governing the country ? We all boast of our free country, that we have person- al liberty and all are on an equality be fore the law. Thatis all right, and is all any man should ask Labor should be free and withopt restrictions, each man ought to be allowed to buy where he can’buy the cheapest and sell where he can get the best price for his wares. A tariff might be all right in this country, were it not that the other countries strike back. You restrict them and they will restrict you. Tax them and they will tax yon. I am one of those that believe that the best way is to allow freedom in all things designed to do right ; restrict only when necessary to resirain the evil doer. I must close as I am now too lengthy. My object is to caliattenti on to the important subject so that people will begin to think. Thought brings action and action brings results. Mr. Editor, where I am wrong correct me and wiere I am right make it more plain. Yours truly, J. W. POTTER, November 13th. 1885 SE —— All is not Gould's that glitters, ton Star. Clearfield Republican of November 13, 1885, which expressed the idea of tariff The shock to the busi- | This would insure to the Government a | A Bigger Boodle Fund. Republicans Will Pass the Shipping Subsidy Bill, Then the Hat. WasHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 23.—The motive which induced the President to send out the “whip” from the White House to Republican Members of Con gress, urging them to be 1n their seats at the opening day of the season and to be | prepared to maintain a quorum during | the remainder of the session, is pow | known. It comes from a source, the re- ; liability of which is not to be questioned, ' that it is the intention of the President, | and Spraker Reed is understood to have given his hearty acquiesence to the plan, to pass the Shipping Subsidy bis wiih the least possible delay. These biils are to be used as the collateral on which the Republicans intend to raise their | Presidential campaign fund. The Re- | . : . | publican Congressional Campaign Coui- stands by the Democrats tbe Beopiintie | mittee complained during the recent ! campaign that they were not able to | raise money, as the manufacturers had | contributed largely to the campaign fund in the last Presidential election, | and the passage of the Tauff hill was only in payment for services rendered. It was said during the campaign that | if the Republican managers could have guaranteed the passage of the Shipping bills, a large campaign fund could have been raised, but they were notin a po- gition to make any such guarantees, and the contributions which they expected were not made. If the:e bills are pass- | ed at this session the vessel owners who i will profit by them are expected to make very substantial acknowledgement. t the money thus raised will be used in the fall of 92. Tt is for that Harrison is working. When the bills were first {introduced Representative Cannon was opposed to them, and it was owing to { his opposition that they were not con- sidered in the House, as no report could be made from the Committee on Rules assigning a day for their consideration. Itis understood that since the recent cyclone in the Fitteenth Illinois district. the scales have fallen from Hon. G.’s eves, and he has been converted by the President, and now sees the necessity of plundering the Treasury for the sake of raising a campaign fund. That the bills will pass it Speaker Reed is able to hold bis forces together is a foregone conclu~ sion, Insists That He is Dead. WILKE BARRE, Pa., Nov. 55. —Wilkes- barre physicians are puzzled over one of the most singular cases that ever has come under their notice. John C. Far- | rell, ex-Superintendent of the Wilkes- { barre Water Company, a wealthy eciti- zen of this place, has not eaten a morsel of food for two weeks. He persistently refuses to eat, insisting that he is dead. | His physicians say a mania such as his i is almost unheard of. His friends have | concluded to have him ‘transferred to the Lusane Hospital at Danville. ADDITIONAL LOCALS. ——Hog cholera has broken out in parts of the county. It with the scar- city of corn,is causing earlier butchering and less fut pork than usual. -—Work on the old Academy building is progressing rapidly and it will not be long now until Bellefonte will have a neat attractive building in which students can follow all the ad- vanced lines of academic work. ——Mr. Wm, B. Maitland, proprietor of the Bellefonte Boiler Works, on Tues- day presented to each one of his em- ployes a fine turkey for Thanksgiving. This is a yearly custom of Mr. Maitland, showing that he is a gentleman of liberal spirit. ——Seventeen persons have filed their applications for the comnussioners clerk- ship. The sixteen who wont get it will each have plenty of company in his de- feat and won’t need be lonesome when reflecting over the uncertainties of doubtful things. ——On Tuesday and Wednesday Mr Robert A. Jackson and family, of Osce- ola, meved into thelate residence of John Ardell, Jr., on East Linn street. Mr. Jackson comes to Bellefonte to ac- cept the management of the Universal Manufacturing Company. Miss Belle Shortlidge, of Media, . Pa., stopped off here op her way home from Pittsburg, where she has been as a delegate to the non-partisan Temper- ance convention. Miss Shortlidge is a cousin of our townsman, Mr. William Shortlidge, at whose home she is visiting. —— Willliam, son «f James and Margaret Bradley, died atthe home of his parents in Milesburg on Wednesday, November 18th, 1390, aged 21 years, 8 months and 18 days. For over fifteen vears he bad been a cripple--the result of an i njury received in early childhood. The Lock Haven Democrat was was very much worried during the ear- ly part of the week lest some of Belle- fonte’s best dancers would go down to that - little city and carry off the silver cups offered by the Knights of Labor to the best lady and gentleman ghde waltzer- at their dance, which was held in the - armory at that placce on Thanksgiving - Eve. A GREAT DIscovERY.—James Do- lan, of Bellefonte, an experienced miner, | has leased the Wm. McGowen property near Roopsburg and has found iat a depth of 65 feet the largest deposit of pipe iron ore that has yet been op- ened in Centre county. The ore as tak. en from the mines is marketable. Iron ho are interested should call and see it.