do RT YT prs fafa e, Pa., Nov. 20, 1891. P. GRAY MEEK, - - = Ebpitor What Does it Mean? The tax-payers of the county will remember that at the last term of court, upon the order of Judge Furst, a bill of indictment for maintaining a nui- sance, was presented against the county commissioners. This was done ju the face of the fact, that the com- missioners had at that time made pre- parations for removing the builling complained of, and were only waiting for the action of the boreugh council, to give them authority to lay seweraze pipes from the Court House to the creek. Shortly after the action of the grand jury and court, the council de- termined that unless the commissioners laid sewerage pipes large enough to ac- commodate the entire town, and then turned them over ‘te the borough after the work was completed, they could not use the street for the purposes de- gired. This ended the idea the com- missioners first entertained, for the reason that it woull be putting the county to a large expense for the beue- fit of the borough, aad that when the money had been expended, the com- missioners would have no control over the improvements made. Their next effort was to secare drain- age into the old well which is jast out- | side of the Court House yard, and on Monday last, the trenches were dug! and pipe purchased, to run this point. comiissioners, when they were to noti- fied that if they proceeded to drain the | Court House building inte the weil, His Honor Judge Furst would at once doing so. The old well proposed to be used for this purpose has been cles ed tor years, and would have made a | most excellent and effective sink ; bet ter by far than any one inuse at avy | hotel or public building in town. The query now is, what did Judge Furst mean by attempting to preveat the commissioners trom doing, that which he ordered them indicted at the | He | knew when he threatened 10 issue an’ injunction that the action of the coun- | last term of conrt, for not doing? cil prevented the commissioners from getting the necessary drainage to the | creek. He knew there was no other place ta ran the sewerage into, and that without proper drainage, the im- | provements he demanded, and that the | grand jury indicted the commissioners | for not making, could not be had. Why this effort on his part to stop them? Wasit in the hope that he could have things in such a muddle, by next Monday, that the new grand jury, would recommend what he has long dezired—the tearing our of the front of the present court room and the practical erection of a new Court House? To most peaple it loeks that way, but ualuckily for bis sHonor's © ditle scheme, the council at t= meet ing on Tuesday evening last granted the commissioners the right to lay a | six inch pipe down high street, and a new Court Fouase at a eost of a hun- dred thousand dollars, will not be erect: | ed because the old one needed new out- buildings and better sewerage. In this matter the commissioners .are.considerally on top, ana the (ax-| payers tiny be thaokiul that the sima- tion is as it is. JA Matter of Importance that Showsid not be Overlooked. Uhder the new election law, which goes nto effect after the eleciions in February next, the Siate is required to furnish, at its expense, the necessary booths, railing and boxes, to hold the first election. After thug, the county "is zequired to provide its own fixinres, The number of voting precitcts now in this county ds fourty-seven. It is sail that ander the new law two hundred and fifty persons are as many as ean possibly vote at one division, and to at- tempt more is to run the risk of deoriv- ing those who eome last ot an opportu- nity of voting, If this estimate i3 cor- rees manv of the precinets in the eonn- ty, as now coostituted, contain more voters than ean possibly cast their bal lots at a single polling place, under this cumbersome act. : Next year will be the presidential election. There will be an unusually full vote polled, and as the entire sys tam and methods of voting will be new to the people, the work of preparing an i depositing ballois will be necessa- rily slow. For these reasons, it seems to us that the proper thing forthe Court or the Coauty Commissioners to do, would be to look into this matter and consider the propriety of increasing the number of voting places, to such an extent as w.il secure to every citizen the oppor oe rere nens sf Judge of the surprise of the! And this should be doue ai as early a date as tunity to cast his ballot. possible, before the spring election, so that the people of any new disirict formed, could choose their own judge and inspectors, and that the Commis- sioners may know how many outfits for precincts wiil be needed, before cr- dering irom the State. There is no reason why this matter should be delayed uwntil after the first election, and the people of the county put to the expense of purchasing the additional number of booths required to accommodate the voters. It we need more districts, let them be made at once, and while the State the the bears the expense of furnishing necessary appliance for holding elections, A Certain Remedy, There is a certain class of people in the warld who are always one the qui wive for an affront, whether intentional ar not. Ever ready and in arms to re- sent a suppesed slight, no difference Sometimes itis oniy the gaestion of who shall sing the solo in how small. the church choir. The suspicious one 15 always positive that he has not had the same opportunity to win public laurels that other members have had, aud thereby creates such a breach in the congregation that the minister with many ce aml Good Will sermons, cannot heal. Often it is the ward pol- itician who imagines that the party leaders have. wot coasaited hia as of ten us they should, and determines to make themacknowledge his dictator ‘ship bv creating divisions in the party that loses a victory, that may be, af- Buc of ten it is the home and social cirele that | i fects & national cause. more | suffer wost from these bristling, touchy and over sensitive creatures, who in- { i terpret every thoughtless or rather un- | guarded word aod action asa personal p issue an injunction, to prevent their! have ot instauation. Different remedies been preserived for the treatment this class af individuals, who usually areto be puied, rather thanjindged on account of their disappointments und The Kaow worn oat digestive organs. effectual mothod we wig Ky. { where D. P. AryoLp literally, knocked oi, tried Iasi week in Lexington, lown and wiped up the floor with | Resent J. BrecxeNminer, son otf the { Congressman. | BRECKENRIDGE, it appears aecused | Anxorp of insulting him during a re- | ception given by the Governor, and in- | gisted on it in emphatic language even | after the other had quietly denied the | assertion. As the Governor's mansion | was not a suitable place for a free { fizht, all party's concerned withdrew ARNOLD at first did not-appreciate the sitaation; bag to defend such a mauner to a stable near by. when he was called upon himselt he did it ia | resent an unintentional wrong for some | I months hat Breck ENRIDGE will not want to come. The remedy was | rather sovare, but if some people could | have pounded into their head: a Kole | mora common sense and the ability to i dissern between a real offense and a suppose injury, life would wet be the i series of exaggerated mole hills that iv {is to ®0 many. Nn sar | | Gegeral Palmer's Partisan Expressions. i i Several weeks since we mentioned, | eaitoria ment to Hrxry Grave, av Atlanta, | Ga,, and now we are competled to re- ! fer ta the despicable stand taken by i General Panmur, commander-in cliuf | of the Grand Ary of the Repablie, in | regard to the circumstandes attending'! i the ceremonies. General Parse has condemned the {commitice for permitting what he si le by side withahe srs and sarines, and his, words bedr with thew, sgnifi {cance of a4 very partisan feeling, walle ! | the man, over waose tomb the LW emblems shorld ever hat, had pravel ito Gud that seedioaal feelings he for { go:ten in the love which he aad $0 no. | bly striven to inspice. Gen. peopie and many of «his warmest trien!s are condemning is unfeeling expressions, which will certainly tend more 10 open up the old wounds than to eneoura ve forgettalness of the past. old paper, commenis on the afair as follows : This is not the talk of a soldier. sectional and partisan all through. federate flags at the unveiling of the Grady monument. If there Lad been such a display among the pieturesque decorations of the occasion, it would have been all right, but nobody thought ofit. A cotupany of Confederates cur- ried in procession, a war reiic in the, shape of 4 battered banner under which they had fought in a bundred batties. All genuine soldiers understand the significance of such an incident. This’ reiic or souvenir was regarded by old Confederates simply us a relic, a remin. | der of ‘their heroism and sufferings in the past. In all ages soldiers, whether victorious or vanquished, have affec. It is the way tionately treasured their uniforms, their Host | to! ly, the unveiling of the monu- | termed the display of confederate fags, Parype | ha= betittied himself in the eyes of the’ The Atlznta Constitution, Mr. GRADY'S | There was no display of Con- ! art Arr te paar = flags, their swords-and other souvenirs of their campaigns. For a century after the war of the ses, descendants of the rival houses of York and Lancaster proudly displayed their red and white roses, and they were none the less loyal to England for dwing so. Through all the changes of govern- ment in France, there has never been a tine when an old soldier would not wear in the public the Legion of Honor cross presented to him by the first Na- poleon. Soldiers understand this sort of thing and only politicians and narrow- minded bigots misrepresent it. When the Grady monument Was unveiled, Atlanta was literally crowded with fed- eral flags from the monument to the suburbs. General Slocum and other | union officers, soldiers and veterans, saw nothing but union flags everywhere. General Palmer misrepresents Mr. Grady when he says that he would not {have countenanced confederate veterans and their war relics. That is precisely what Mr. Grady did when Jefferson Davis paid his last visit to Atlanta. There was sotne talk at the time about a fow confederate flags. Several northern Republican newspaper correspondents wore them and Mr. Grady very kappily | and satisfactorily made it plair to the | country that the loysl South had one | flag, but she had the right under that, flag, to treasure her scars, her souvenirs | and her relics. There is no latter day | sentiment absutit and women, boys and | rebels have nothing to do with it. Ti i i i | | i { | | | | } ae people from Virginia to Texas are loyal to one flag and one country, but they are proud of their old battietields, battle flags, broken swords and other evidences displayed such supreme valor and en- durance. It is all nght. Union soldiers livine inthe Seuth understand snd they “like the men who wore the gray, all the better for this little touch of human nature.” ——Complaint comes from Elmira, N. Y., that the Aus voting, was ne obsiacle in the = ralian system of way of those who wanted to purchase votes, at We have an idea that the people of Pennsyivaoia will the recent election. waken up to the same tact hy the time they get through with the first election under their cumbersome new law, In it there are more ways for the briber to, know cer 8 gots he gots, nly that what he pays for aud for the boss and bull dozer toascertain just how every maa in their employ vores, than in all the election iaws that have ever been tried, 1 4 i on of the gigantic struggle in which pe} Swamped by a Cold Wave. Midwinter Weather Prevailing Through out the Great Northwest, — Three Thousand Head of Sheep and Many Cuitle Frozen to Death—A Cyclone Passes Over the Eastern Portion of Pennsylvania — Large Amount of Damage Wrought. Str. Pauw, Mion, Nov. 18—Reports are still coming in regarding the coid wave. At many points the weather is as cold as that usually recorded in mid- winter. The limit has been reached at Red Lake Falls, at which place a fall to 20° below zero is reported. Sand Centre, reports 12° below ; Crookston, 14° below ; Barnesville, 10°, and Hal- lock, 16° South Dakota suffers in- tensely, the register in that State being all the way from 4° to 16° below zero. There was considerable delay in the trains, and the excessively cold weath- er came so suddenly that it found peo- ple in many places short of coal and with their stock almost wholly unpro- | teered. From Sioux reservation and points on the Missouri river come stories of the loss of stock. Many cattle were trozen. David Hall, of Sully county, lost 3.000 head of sheep. Reports from North Dakota say the tempera- ‘ture is very (rigid as far west as Minot. The ground is so thoroughly frozea that uo further attempts will be made at Fall plowing. Reports as to the condtion of the wheat crop are con- flicting. Those sent out by the rail- roads, report that nearly all wheat on shock has been threshed and that wiieat in stack ean be threshed at any time. The correspondents, how. ver, give a far less glowing view of the sit nation, saving hundreds of acres is in shock and can be now used for nothing except feed in the straw. Later re- ports from various pointsindicate that that the back bone of the wave is broken. REACHES FAR SOUTH. WasmingroN, Nov, 18-—The storm that developed Sunday has moved over the Lake regions, and is now disap- pearing northeast of New England. This cyclonic storm has been uansual- ly severe, and its influence, supple- meated by that of the marked high wave of anti-cyclonic area moving be- hind, bronght severe gale and a decid- ed cold wave to all sections east of the Rocky mountains. Killing frosts are reporied this morning at Jacksonville and Mooile. The New Ballot Law. Bucks County Will Have to Go to Con- siderable Expense. DOYLESTOWN, Noy. 17.—Jadge Yerkes, in commenting {rom the bench on the new election law, took oceazion to say that the expense of putting the new law into practice in Bucks county would cost the county probably more than it now costs to rua the county one yeur. Many of the country districts ave more voters than can probably be accommodated at the usual polling places in a room large enough to comply with the law. The judge said that the county commissioners would be obliged to erect buildings tor voting purposes unless the districts were divided, as there wa: no room large enough in several of the townships for the purpose. He also said the court had mo power to divide the districts, except upon petition of the cit- imens of such districts. The county com- missioners were advised to make the pro- vigion for the expeuse wade necessary by the enuctment of the new law, \ cen The ‘Straight-outs” in Earnest. The Anti-ving or ‘Straight-out’”” Re- publicans,of Allegheny county who poll edie larger vote than the regular organi- zaticn nt the recent election have decided to maintain their fiction. It was de- cided on Saturday iust to choose dele- gates to the National Convention as the only ¢imon-pure Republicans from Al- legheny conniy. i The Ystraight-outs’’ are reformers. { They expect to reform their purty here { so that Chris Magee will ‘be driven out | of it after being shorn of all his great i political strength. Most of them are I Quay wen, their leaders being distinctly 1 80, either holding official position " throngh Quay’s influence or expecting i wo do so ome time. When they decided i to select delegates to the National Con- vention they first approached B. T. Jones, ensirman ot the National Repub- { lean exeertive committee when Blaine | wus beaten in 1884, and asked him to (bp one of their delesates. Mr. Jones i declined te take up the fight, but the “girmight-owts” say they can get some’ equally prominent Republican to aceapt | the credentinis, | i A New Political ‘Party Formed. Boston, Nov. 16.—The Post to-day | publishes aw communication signed James | Menks which states that a new political | party bas been formed. The communi- cation contains the declaration of the pariy which will be seat out for signa- tures. ‘The deciazation suys: “We, the andersigaed, believing that every paper Ldoilnr issued by the United States (xov srument should he redeemable in gold at the o tion of the helder, believing that wie silver question should be kept in politics, believing also in a tariff for re- venue’ only, and findins no existing party whieh advoeates honest money cand a low welll, hereby earoll ourselves "as members of the new party.” | Bliss Willard ¥nanimously Re-Elected. Boston, Nov. 17.—At the fourth day's session of the dual temperance convention to-day John G. Woodley spoke briefly of his reformatory cailed “Rest Island.” Miss Francis KE. Wil- lard was re-elected president, receiving 393 votes out of 396. Mrs. Mary A. Woolbridpe was elect- ed recording seceetary ; Mrs. Caroline E. Bwell, of Chiteago corresponding sec- retary, and Miss Esther Pugh, of Chica- £0, treasarer, -—— Madame de Valsyre, the noted advocate of woman's rights in France, is an expert at handling the foils, and is The line of freezing passes from ! Savannah soa'h of Mobile and through | New Orleans. Foliowing are some [rainimny temperatures, with the rela- { tioas to the lowest previously recorded { during the second decade ot November, viz: New Orleans, 32° 2° below; Mobile, 30° 2° below; Atlanta, 28°1° below ; Montgomery, 24°; Jackson: ville. 36°, equal to the lowest. Baromeiic depression has appeared north of Montana, but it will scarcely attect the weather for two or more days; but the hich wave, the crest of which is central over the Central Mis- sissippi valley, will continue the cold and clear weather in most districts. The temperature will gradually recover behind the high wave with the winds as they shift to the southerly. The rise in temperature has reached to the Missouri river. The Revolt of Big Foots Band. WasHINGTON, Nov. 17.—A telegram has been received at Army Headquarters from Ger. John B. Breoke, command- ing the Department of Dakota, in res- ponse to one sent by Gen. Schofield asking the truth about the rumor that Big Foot’s band had left the reservation and started for. Pine Ridge. Gen. Brooke stated that he had been unable to learn anything definiie about the movement, but would find out its scope and significance at once. . " There is no apprehension here that this movement will be followed by any- like last winter’s outbreak. Gen. Scho- field said this morning : “The state of things in the Indian country is to-day far better than it was a year ago. The lessons learned by both sides at Pine Ridge and Wounded Knee may not be lasting but they havea wholesome effect for the time being. There is more content among the Sioux this winter than last, and this is mainly due to the fact that the affairs of the Government, as far as they affect the Indians, are, I believe, being oetter administered. Of course, there will al was be some discontent among that elass of people, and an undercurrent of trou- ble, but there seems to be less and less of it as we tind out how to handlas the sitnation. 1 do not think there are any Isigns fo. be discerned of trouble this winter, for as far as I cansec the tribes are quite. ' There will be rin general chang- es of troops this winter unless some emergency should srvise. The Ist of October is taken as the general liniit be- yond which has bean found nnadvisable to change stations until the spring.” Heavy Sentence for Violation of the Dow Liguor Law. Gasper Schafer, of Knox township, Colurabiana ecunty, Ohio, was recently arrested for selling liquor contrary to the local option feature of the Dow law in forge in that township. The case came up for hearing Tuesday. He plead ed guilty to the charge. Judge Nichols sentenced him to pay a fine of $500 and serve un term of 30 days in the county jail and also pay the costs of prosecn- tion. This is the beaviest fine ever im- posed upon a salookecper iu that seetion of the State under the Dow law. ec —— ——Their majoritiee.—1'he official vote gives Gregg, Republican, for Au- ditor CGreneral, 58,152 majority, and Morrison, for State Treasurer, 54,257. Whether the men elected will follow “precedents,” on the plan of McCamant and Boyer, because the Menate counid find “no jurisdiction” in their cases, will he developed in the vear future. Phe majority course of the Senate is no bar to public robbery. What a “grand moral idea’ lesson has been rendered hv onr legislators—23 for robbery and fund of sieeplechasiug. 19 against. Clearfield Republican. A High Compliment to the Attorney General Hensel. The New York Z1Umes' special cor- respondent sends that paper the follow- ing from Harrisburg: There is one man who has made reputation and new position as the result of the miscarriage of justice in the recent extra session of the State senate called Sy Governor Pattison to considcr the bad condition of the finances of this State. That man is William U, Hensel, attorney general of the commonweaith. Never before in the history of this State did any man make reputation for himself as a lawyer in so short a time as Mr. Hensel has done by his conduct of the investigation made by the State senate. He did this, too, against great odds, and in spite of the seemingly abortive results of his work. Mr. Hensel, now just about 40 years old, has been known for a long time as an important political figure; but his reputation as a lawyer has come to him largely as a result of the political work he has done during’the past 18 months. From making merely partisan speeches he changed his tack last year and be- gan to make legal arguments on the stump. THE DELAMATER CAMPAIGN. Ia the Pattison canvass of 1890 there wera many complications surrounding Delamater, the Republican candidate for governor. In addition to his ques- tionable record as a legislator, and the suspicion that surrounded his candidacy becanse of his relations to Quay, there were matters of a financial character. He was the proprietor and manager of a bank, and this bank had been favored with about $100,000 deposit of State money. Mr. Hensel, then a lawyer in excellent practice at Lancaster, took the position that, under the constitution, Delamater was ineligible for the office of governor because of his relation to the public funds of the State. This argument, backed by a liberal citation of authorities, made a strong im- pression upon the voters of Pennsylvania, and was one of the potent influences in the election of Governor Pattison. Dur- ing the remainder of the canvass Mr. Hensel confined his attention to the de- velopment of this legal doctrine, and his action in doing so made his one of the very few instances where a lawyer had the courage and the taci to make a can- vass on lines almost wholly legal. duties of his office before the Bardsley defaleation was brought to light, and work for the attorney general that has kept his office busier than it was ever known to be. At every tarn the new attorney general has shown himself ready, willing and able to deal with the extraordinary condition of things that had come to the surfuca. When the senate came together in ex- tra session the attorney general was asked to conduct the case, as it was then terr.ed, wisely making a distinction be- tween an impeachment or criminal pro- ceeding and the object for which the sen- ate had been called hy the governor. He declined, but avowed his willingness to ‘‘assist”’ the senate in reaching a con- clusion whether it should advise the gov- ernor that the “reasonable cause” of the constitution existed for the removal of delinquent officials. Never abandoning this position, he entered upon his work. And never did a partisan body get such an amount of “assistance” that it did not want. Mr. Hensel’s cross-examination of State Treasurer Boyer was masterly in every way. He drew from an unwilling witness admissions that showea the truth of everything alleged by the gov- ernor in his message, and proved, be- sides, many evasions of the law that had not been known. So destructive was this examination of the witness, of whom less was expected, that every measure was resorted to, and that with success. to save McCOamant, the auditor general, from undergoing such an ordeal. It was felt quite universally by the Republican senators and managers that if McCamant should be subjected toecross-examination by such a lawyer about his ‘‘neckties” and “rare books” he would be sure to break down and give away his own case and that of his party. So the victim was saved from this shame by being saved from examination. A MASTERLY ARGUMENT. The attorney general's argument in favor ol the jurisdiction of the senate was merely the summing up of his case. But it was so logical aud comprehensive, and establizhed his contention so fully, that it extorted admiration even from the great crowd of able lawyers retained by the accused officials, and from the lead- ing lawyers in the senate itself. As the result ot it all, nobody in Pennsylvania is likely hereafver to indulge any doubts as to the legal ability or standing of the attorney general of the commonwealth, Cut a Whale in Halves, The Anchor line sicamship Ethiopia sliced 4 whale in two with her steel prow ou Saturday morning last on her voyage from Glasgow to this port. Sec ond Officer Fife thinks the whale was a rorquas or razor hack. Ie doesn’t like to say how big it was, but is lo elived to think that ninety feet would measure its feng Many of the iopia's passengers had a mometaypy giitnpse of the whale, The sun shoue oritlianly from a cloud- less sky, : ud the sea was placid. Near ly everybody wus on deck, Ar 10:45 o'clock a bir bubbling was was observ ed about 200 feet ahead. A huge, shining dark body appeared in the mid- dle of the bubbiing, and a fountain of water spouted skyward. Second Officer Fite thought that the whale would have sense cnough to get out of the way, Maybe it thought the Bihiopia was another marine monster and wanted to have a litile fan with her. Before Mr. File could give the signal to stop and reverse, thie siem of the Ethiopia had sirack the whale amidships, The vessel vibrated as it she had hit a piece of sunken wreck. The engineer thonght some of the ma- chinery had broken and falien through he hull, Passengers who ran to the sides and looked over the rails saw the divided whale floating past, its blood giving a red tinge to the Kthio- pia's foamy track. Hardly bad Mr. Hensel assumed the | out of that has developed an amount of English Farms Flooded. Phenomenally Bad Weather Causes Great Trouble. Many Acires are Under Water. Loxpon, November 17. —There ap- pears to be no end of the stones of da- mags resulting from the phenomenally bad weather tnat has been prevailing in Great Britain. The latest story of the disaster comes from Somerset, one of the southwest counties of England. The county is traversed by a number of rv- ers, including the Parrot Brue, Axe, Yeo and Tone. Along these rivers are immense marshes and tracts of land of great fertility. The farm lands are un- der a high state of cultivation, and con- sequently floods in that district are al- ways accompanied by heavy losses to the tillers of the soil : The heavy rains filled the rivers to the danger point. This was particularly the case with the river Parrot, and much anxiety was expressed lest the river should overflow and inundate the { farm lands along its banks. What was | dreaded hus cecurred, for last night the bank of the river, ata point whereit was particularly strong gave way and the water rushed through the crevasse and flowed to a considerable depth over the farms, To make matiers worse, the break oec- curred in a place in the band but a com- paratively short distance from where the rivers enters into the Bristol channel, and the resultis that as the stream rises it causes the water in the river to back up, thus increasing the volume pouring through the break, All the farmers and others residing in the city are working energetically to stop the crevasse. Stones, timbers, freee and large bags of dirg are being thrown into the gap, but as yet the efforts to stop the flood have met with little success. The damage was caused by the inundation is placed at $330,000 and it is believed that, un- less the overflowing waters are soon turned back into the river, the loss will amount to an enormous sum. A Magnigeent Affair. Andrew Carnegic’s Niece Married to the Son of an Iron King. _ Prrrssure, Nov. 18,.—To-night in Calvery Hpiscopal church before 1,000 invited guests Andrew Carnegie guve { away his niece, Miss Margaret Carne- gie, daughter of the late Thomas M. Carnegie in marriage to Oliver Garrvet- son Rickettson, son of John Rickettson, the Pittsburg ironmaster. The -cere- mony, which with its surroundings, was one of the grandest in the social history of this-eity, was performed by Rev. J. Crocker White, D. D., assisted by Rev. George Hodges, D. D. The eight ush- ers Were of this city’s most prominent young men and ithe bridesmaids of equally prominent families, Mrs. Andrew Carnegie was present with friends from the Fast ana West. A magniiicent reception was held at Fairfield, the beautiful home of the bride’s mother, after which the wedded couple started on an extended tour. A London Paper Says. Lo~NpoN, Nov. 18.—The News ina financial article this morning referring to the speech of Secretary Foster at the chamber of commerce banquet in New York on Tuesday night, says: “Secre- tary Foster's speech isa confession of opinion that America has gone too far to draw back. The United States treasury is in the same position as the Bank of France, itihas to face the probability of being saddled with an immense stock of’ useless silver while taking measures to hold so large a reserve af gold that it might just as well not keep silver at all, The Americans seem to be so occupied with crop and trade prospects that they neglect currency matters so long as their material progress is not wiolently inter- rupted.” i Their Difference. From the Altoona Times. One of the most interesting of the present political battles is that for the Ohio senatorship. The contestants, the venerable John Sherman and the loud mouthed Foraker, ave supposed to be pretty evenly matched as far as supe porters are concerned. ‘We need not say, however, that in mental and moral ability there is no parallel whatever be- tween the two men. Sherman and For- aker are two who have but little in common. One is a great statesman who has impresssd his psrsonality on the his- tory of his country. The other is dis- tinguished only in the front ranks of low grade politicians, Where Egan Fails. From the Omaha World Herald. The Associated Press effort to excul- pate Minister Bgan is well enough so far as it goes, but it does not touch upon the vital point, that being in disfavor with the new government of Chili, he has outlived his nsefuluessas a represen- tative of the United States, if he ever en- joved any. Drawing a Prize Both Ways. From the Wayne Indepeudent, A dentist who extracts teeth without pain has been operating in Unadilla and other places. He places a silver dollar in the hand of the patient while extract- ing the teeth, to be retained it he hurts. The only pain he has caused anyone yet is to give up the dollar wm Why New England Squirms. ; From the Kansas City Times. One reason why New Hueland is rapidly becoming Democratic is that they want free raw maternls. Every workingman there knows that it raw materials were free they would ve cheap- er. Yet Republicans dare tell them that the tariff is nota tax, or that the foreigner pays it. Itis no wonder that they reject such apparent absurdities and resent such imputatiovns of ig- norance. —— Made Cashier of the Treasury. HARRISBURG, November 17.—John W. Morrison, state treasuierciect, was to-day appointed by State Treasurer Boyer to be cashier of the treasury, vice William Livsey, resigned