_m—mllree Terms 2.00 A Year,in Advance Bellefonte, Pa., April 8, 1892. P. GRAY MEEK, - - - Ebpiror — First Evidence of Failure. The Rhode Island election has prov- en the fact that the Australian ballot system is no check to bribery,or no se- curity for the employee who desires to vote as his conscience, rather than his employer, dictates. In parts of that State where bribery and bulldozing could be most easily accomplished on Wednesday last, the Republicans had exact copies of the official ballot print- ed, and marked them Jas they desired them voted. These were given to pur- chased voters before they went to the polls, and at the same time a small portion of the bribe money was handed over, The party who had been pur- chased went to the election as other voters do, demanded an official ballot and proceeded to the booth, where the ballot already prepared was exchanged for the official one, and voted as the legal or regular ticket. The official ballot which had been given by the election officers, was kept and present- ed to the briber as evidence that ithe individual bribed had tulfilled his part of the agreement, when the balance of the money for which his vote was pur- chased, was paid him. The bulldozing scheme was worked the same way exactly, except that there was no money paid, and the em- ployee was required, after voting, to produce the official ballot given him, as evidence that he had cast the one furnished him by his boss. To be sure there are heavy penalties imposed for these offenses, but the trouble is to prove that they have been committed. The man who has taken a bribe will not “peach” on the the man who bribed him, nor will the de- pendent employee, who, to make his situation secure, votes as his boss dic- tates, insure the loss of his place by informing on his overseer. It was the hope of every honest vot- er in the country that the adoption of the Australian voting system would be a preventative of these two, if of no other, evils that our own system was subjected too. The experience in Rhode Island proves that this hope is without foundation, when desperate and designing persons conspire to de- feat the object of the law,and that with this new, complex, costly and unsatis- factory method of voting, we are but little if any better off, than under the old system that has been so generally deeried. Pennsylvania will have a trial of the same system this fall. and after it has been fully experimented with, we should not be surprised to hear the same complaints made against its operations-that-come to us from Rhode Island. After all it is a question if any kind of a voting system, other than that which does away with the printed or written ballot entirely, and substitutes for it some mechanical devise that wiil register the will of the voter without leaving a record for the briber and bulldozers’ satisfaction, will secure either that secrecy desired or security from the corrupting influence of money, that an honest election and a fair ex- pression of the popular will demand. ——Standing out.in direct contrast to the account of a mother’s great sac- rifice, which we publish elsewhere in to-day’s paper, comes the story, from Ireland, of Lady MoNTaGUE's cruelty, which was so unnatural” and vicious that the jury would have sentenced her to ten years imprisonment instead of one, had she been a poor nobody with- out influential friends. To punish her little three year old daughter for soiling her dress, she tied the child’s hands behind its back and fastened them to iron rings in a dark closet. Three hours afterwards she] opened the door and found the child dead. Nothing appeals so forcibly to the sensibilities of the humane as injustice or cruelty to those who are incapable of defense. And although no crime is more deserving of swift and righteous judgment than cruelty towards a very young child - Lady Monracue who occupies a high placein the world of fashion, would not even have been held for trial had her more humble neigh- bors not insisted on a show of justice. —— A factional fight that promises to be as destructive to Republican hopes, as a Kansas cyclone is of cot- ton wood sheep shacks, is just now raging in Ohio between the adherents of “icicle” SHERMAN and those of wind- bloated Foraker. If each should swallow 'tother and nothing be left of either when the war is over, what a relief to the public and a blessing to Ohio it would be, Exposing the Iufant. The infant tinplate industry that Republicanism and McKiNLEy have taxed every user of tin in any shape, so fearfully, to protect, and which curios ity seekers have been hunting for all over the country, was brought to light by a fire, on Monday morning, at Front and Canal’s street Philadelphia. It consisted of a one story brick building thirty by seventy feet, andthe report of the fires says: ‘the loss in- cluding building, machinery, stock and fixtures, all of which were consumed is something less than $7,000, fully covered by insurance.” In the entire country there are said to be six industries ot the kind, and this was one of the most expensive plants engaged in manufacturing in. From the assertions of Republican papers,that defended the tariff robbery, the people were left under the impres- sion that hundreds of thousands of dol- lars were invested in each plant and that thousands of werkingmen found employment at good wages in éach. one of them. of seven thousand dollars, dozen of laborers. And it is for the “protection’ of this kind of an investment that the people of.the country pay aun increased price amounting, as estimated in round fig- ures, to over a million of dollars year- ly for the tin cups, buckets, cans and other articles of the kind they are compelled to use. It isto enrich the investorsin these $7000 plants, that every family in the land is required to pay tribute in the shape of higher prices for articles they cannot do with- out. Surely the people will some day get their eyes opened to the enormity of the tariff fraud that is impossed upon them even if it requires a fire in a tin- plate manufactory to do it. ——Pages of history are devoted to the sacrifices and sufferings that a mother has endured for her child ; but seldom does one hear a more pathetic tale of a mother’s love than comes to us through an account of a fire, at Wilkes-Barre, last Friday afternoon. Mrs. Gore EasBy, after escaping from her burning home, discovered that her two children had not been carried out. Without a moment's hesitation she returned to the building followed by a fireman. He grasped the little boy, aged three, and Mrs. Easny took her little two year old daughter in her arms. The fire reached some pow- der cans just at this time and a vio- lent explosion followed. The fire man and his charge, who was protect- ed by a woolen blanket, were dragged out in an unconscious condition; but all efforts to find the poor mother were unavailing. After a desperate fight the flames were subdued and the search that was made for the bodies revealed the fact that the little one had been held tightly in the mother’s arms through all the horrors of their terribie deaths. A Forced Confessiou. When Governor McKiNLEY bluntly said to a Rhode Island audience the other night that “tariffs do not raise wages,” he told more truth than in all the balance of his speech. It was not because he wanted to admit the fact, but because the truth was so apparent, in the reduced wages the working men, he was talking to, were receiving under the operation of his bill, that to have said anything. else would have made doubtful to his hearers, every other statement set forth. When this great apostle of tariff taxation admits publicly, that it does not “increase wages,’’ it should be an eye opener for the thousands of workingmen who have been wheedled into voting for those who advocate it, on the pretense of getting better prices for their work. Ifit don’t raise wages and does raise the price of that which the working man wears and uses, how is he to be benefited by it ? Deserves ne Consideration. There is one thing very evident to Democrats who have a greater desire for party success than to follow the fortunes of any particular individual, and that is, that if the adherents of Mr. Creveranxp in New York had made half the efforts, prior to the State Convention, in February, to be represented properly in that Conven- tion, that they are doing now to organ- ize a kicker’s or factional Convention, Mr. HiL. would not have had the walk over he had, nor would Mr. CLevE- LAND aud his friends have been placed in the position of being disorganizers, as their actions now and their May Convention must class them: Mr. CLEVELAND has no more right to have a factional organization in New York, than Mr. Hint. has in Pennsylvania. Both are wrong and both should be in- continently sat down upon. 4 Can Have the Floor. Whenever a Democratic Legislature per- petrates a gerrymander of congressional or legislative districts, Republican papers de- nounce the outrage and have no difficulty in demonstrating that thousands of citizens have been practically disfranchised for partisan ad- vantage. And when a Republican legislature does the same unfair thing democratic editors find it easy to show up the act as a one-sided and unjustifiable one. What is needed is that all editors should agree to demand fair ap- portointments and to speak warmly against all gerrymanders, whether they be originated by party friends or foes. Ifthe gerrymander is ever wrong it is always wrong and honest peo- ple everywhere in this republic should unite to put an-end to it.—dAltoona Tribune. Correct you are brother Tribune. Correct, from the bottom of your boots up, on this question. Now, let us hear you “speak warmly” against your own party that has just consum- mated one of the most villianous and unexplainable gerrymanders in Ohio that hasever disgraced any State. And while you are warm on the sub- ject you might breathe a little of your burning invective against Quay and his crowd here in Pennsylvania for maintaining for years, in violation of ‘.constitutional requirements, a gerry- Here is one uncovered by a fire, and! the bottom facts show an investment | less than | the value of the most ordinary coun- | try printing office, and with room and | facilities to employ a possible ten or a’ mander that “practically disfranchises thousands of citizens for partisan ad- vantage.” Thereis room and occa- sion for a red hot speech on this sub- ject, and the floor is yours for the oc casion, brather Tribune, Rhode Island Republican. The Indications Point to the Legislature Being Republican—A Very Warm Fight Was Had in Newport on the Legislative Ticket. Provipence, R. I., April 6.—The elections in this State to-day were of the most exciting nature. Fifty towns and districts give Wardell, democrat, 12,958; Brown, republican, 12,918. The prohibition vote will probably be enough to defeat an election by the people, but the legislature will be un- doubtedly republican. Newport, R. I., April 6.—The state election in this city has been a hot fight and indications point to the elec- tion of the full democratic legislative ticket. One ward is yet to be heard from, which probably will not change the result. The vote polled has been very large and the ward rooms have been centres of excitement all day. This culminated in the Fifth ward, where the republicans claim that a democratic supervisor, who is also president of the common council, vio- lated the ballot law by giving unsolicit- ed assistance to voters. They collected evidence and placed it in the hands of ex-City Solicitor Prekham, who has promised to prosecute if it is sufficient, and a prominent republican lawyer is of the opinion that it is. The republi- cans propose to bring a criminal suit against President and Supervisor Boyle, and perhaps the warden of the ward as well, and also, if necessary, appeal to the supreme court and contest the seats of the members of the legislature elect- ed here. There was a serious row over the election in Jamestown, culminating in a personal assault by republican Representative J. B. Banders upon Dr. Howland, a democrat, which necessi- tated the attendance of the physician and may result seriously. Provibexce, R. L., April 7.—At 12.40 this morning the returns from all over the State were not all in ow- ing to the tedious counting necessary under the Australian system. The re- turns at hand are sufficient, however, to indicate that there is no election for state officers with a probability of a republican plurality. The state law requires a majority vote to elect and there are a sufficient number of repub- licans returned up to this hour to io- sure the election of Senator Aldrich to the United States senate and the choice of the republican candidates for state officers. Newport probably elects but one representative and it will require another election to determine the choice for the other four. It requires fifty-four members of the legislature to elect on joint ballot and the republicans have at present fifty-one, with every probability of having elected six more. The city of Providence went democrat- ic by about 400 majority, but the city assembly ticket is in doubt. Paw- tucket was carried by the democrats by about 100 and Woonsocket by a little less. The democratic assembly ticket in Woonsocket is elected by thirty, but the Pawtucket assembly ticket is in doubt. The vote polled was the largest in the history of the State. The result is a surprise to everybody and shows that there are several thousand people in the State whom the party managers can never locate. Provipencg, R. I., April 7.—1 a, m. —The total vote eo far is Brown, 23,- 187; Burton, 176; Gilbert. 1,411; Wardell, 22,072. The total vote cast was 46,846, the largest vote ever cast in Rhode Island. A Terrible Hail Storm. WhueeLiNg, W. Va., April 3.—A terrific hail and rain storm, accom pan- ied by thunder and lightning, passed over this section of the country about five o'clock this afternoon. Though the hail stones fell thick and fast in Wheeling no damage of any couose- quence was done. In Martin's Ferry, however, hailstones were as large as hen’s eggs and great damage was done to windows, hundreds of which were broken. The streets were badly dam- aged by the heavy rain. Washouts are reported on the railroads and no trains will be in before morning. It is reported that much live stock in the fields in the country was injured by the hail. In some instances the horns of cattle were broken off. A telephore message from Martin's Ferry says that that nearly every window facing west was broken. oe ———————— A Sa A hE rE ] Awful Work of the Storm Demon in the Western States. A Wide Track of Desolation. Eight States, From Texas to the Dakotas, Swept by tke Cyclone— Great Loss of Life in Kansas— Widespread | Havoc is Wrought in Iowa and Nebraska Partial List of Dead and Injured. Reports of the storm of the lst inst | show it to have been the most general as to extent in many years. The States of Colorado, Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri, Wisconsin, Illinois, Texas and Indiana were swept by a furious gale of wind, rain_and hail, in some places rising to the force of a tornado. The full extent of the less of life is not known, but it 1s believed the fatalities will reach the figure of fifty ut least. The list of injured numbers about 105. Of the later class a large propor- tion will be added to the death rol), as the injuries in many case are serious. The loss in the way of property cannot as yet even be surmised, but there can be no doubt that when all the reports are in, the figures will reach into the millions. Kansas leads the list in the matter of fatalities. It is known that twenty- seven persons lost their lives, and that fifty-seven were injured. These are figures based upon authenticated reports. THE DEATH ROLL IS TERRIBLE. At Towanda—Dr. John D. Godfrey, aged 78, retired physician; Herschel Culp, aged 21, farmer’s son; John Bailey, aged 21, railroad laborer ; John Blake, aged 47, merchant, George Blake, aged 5, the latter’s son ; Miss Annie Robbins, aged 34, Postmistress ; Earl Karr, aged 11,; C. L. Wescate, aged 33. At Augusta—Albert Barnes, aged 28, farmer; infant child of Will- iam Rhecades ; Harmon Hoskins, aged 380, farmer ; infant son of latter ; Mrs. Herbert Abbott, Near Wellington— Mrs. Joseph Showalters and infant child ; William Little and his four children. At South Haven—Benjamin H. Maple and James H. Maple, his son. At Wichita — Pat Martin, farmer. At Eureka—Miss Mary Rizer. At Strong City—John Glosser, Mrs. John Glosser and infant child. Seven persons were killed and over a dozen others badly injured by the torna- do in the little town of Wamego, Kas. The killed are Carles Taylor, wite and child ; Mrs. Albert Eggers and two children, aged 3 and 5 years respective- ly ; Joseph Johnsou, a farm laborer. The storm leveled the house ot Albert Eggers and carried the inmates a dis- tance of 200 feet. The body of Mrs. Eg- gers was found at a considerable dis- tance from the ruins of her home. The body of her youngest child was tightly clasped in her arms, The other child was buried under a mass of timbers. Charies Taylor, his wife and little child were instantly killed. Their bodies were terribly bruised and blackened. KANSAS THE HEAVIEST SUFFERER. All Kansas suffered from the cyclone. Nearly every county was affected. Particularly in the suthern part was the damage severe. Sedgwick, Kingman and Butler counties suffered much. At Strong City nearly every structure in the town was leveled, but the people were prepared for the storm and had taken refuge in their cellars. In Texas, the towns of Bangs and Santa Anna were heavily visited. Four persons lost their lives and ten were in- jured at the former place, while at the latter thirteen were injured and one death occured. Little has been heard from the interior of the State, and the gravest apprehension is felt as to the condition of affairs in the cattle district toward the Indian Territory, where the storm raged in its greatest fury. The property damage will probably be heavier than in any other State. At Des Moines, Boone, Stuart, Mount Ayre, Ottumwa, Muscatine, Marshalltown, Dubuque and many other places build- ings were unroofed, windows blown in, trees uprooted and river craft sunk by the gale. At Des moines alone the damage will be upward of $100,000. THE STORM IN NEBRASKA AND MISSOURI. Great distruction is reported from Ne- braska. AtSuatton, Nerfolk and Platts- mouth the damage was heaviest, but Beatrice, Elk Creek, Beaver City and Nebraska City also suffered heavily. As in Kansas, little has been heard from the farming districts, where the wind raged all day and night over the plains with unobstructed fury. Loss of life is sure to have resulted. Missouri seems to have been lightly visited, except on the western edge. Kansas City was roughly shaken up, and unroofed houses uprooted trees and tangled telegraph wires. Sedalia, too, suffered rather heavily, but the rest of the State escaped practi- cally unscathed. Minnesota and Wis- consin felt only the dying breath of Green the giant gale, and al- though jthe cities of Beloit and Bay in the latter State sustained con- siderable damage there were no casual- ties and the gross loss will not be heavy. Kast of this city the storm seems to have lost its force,and although heavy rains and accompanying high winds are reported from Indiana and points along the lakes, there was no loss of life and little damage to property. CHICAGO'S CATASTROPHE. The people reported as dangerously injured in the terible disaster at Halstead and Pearce streets, caused by the col- lapse of a new seven-story building in a giant whirlwind, appear to have a fair chance of recovery. Seven is the total number of those dead. They are : Edward Mott, aged 2 years ; Horan Mott, aged b years ; David Hulett, aged 6 montbs ; William Gowan, aged 10 years ; Samuel Barsdale, Mary Walsh, of Joliet, Ill., and Mrs. James Gowan. After working all night by the aid of search lights for those buried under the ruins—Samuel Barsdale, Miss Walsh, Mrs. Gowan, and the latter's 10-year- old son William—the firemen were this morning forced to desist, as it was ap- parent to dig any further into the ruins without additional help would bring down upon the rescuers the immense mass of the surrounding debris, Just before 3p. m., the first of the corpses buried under the ruins was reached. The body wasso frightfully crushed that identification was well nigh im- possible. The remains were thought.to be those of Miss Walsh. It was nearly two hours before the debris was removed sufficiently to allow . identified. the bodies to be taken from the ruins. The bodies of Miss Walsh, Mrs. Gowan, Samuel Ensdale and William Gowan were removed to a morgue, where they | were viewed by the Coroner’s jury. ; They were all horribly mangled, and it i | was with difficulty that they were The Storm in the West. St. Pavr, Minn., April 5—It is clear to day and thestorm has passed away all over the northwest. Details as to the extent of the storm are now being received and indicate that its severity was but hinted at in the carrier reports. The blizzard continued most of the night around Miller, South Dakota, and snow drifts eight feet deep are now to be seen. Hundreds of stock wand- ered with the storm, many of which probably perished. One freight train has been stalled in the snow here since yesterday. The uuparalleled storm of rain and snow which has rained at Aberdeen, South Dakota, for the past three days ceased early this morning and the sun is now shining brightly. The fall of snow is simply tremendous and in con- sequence railroads are badly tied up. The north and west line mixed trains on the Milwaukee road laid in the snow all yesterday afternoon and last night. The through Chicago passeng- er on the northwestern got no further than Redfield on this line, but turned there and went back. The blockade is the worst experienced 1n a long time. While seeding will be greatly delayed, farmers and all others are well satis- fied and encouragement is felt. The country districts will be well nigh im- passable for days to come. From Huron, South Dakota, it is re- ported that the snow storm yesterday afternoon blockaded the west and north branches of the Chicago and North- western railway. The northbound train last night only reached Redfield and returned this morning. No trains have been sent out or have arrived from the west since noon yesterday. Lines in other directions are open. Snow ploughs and shovels are work- ing west and north. The Great North- ern trains are also interrupted. The rain fall was the greatest ever known here in April. Cuicaco, Ill, April 5—The Illinois state building at the World’s Fair grounds was struck by a small cyclone to-day. The tower and half the me- morial hall were wrecked. The loss is between $10,000 and $20,000. Two policemen near by were killed, Credit to Whom Credit is Due. The State of Pennsylvania has pro- vided for the payment of the last dol- lar of its debt in 1812, says the Phila- delphia Record , through the operation of a Sinking Fund for which provision was made before the war. Inorder that there should be no mischance nor failure through legislative default, the revenues belonging to the Sinking Fund were put out of the reach of mis- appropriation by specific constitutional requirement. Nothing short of insur- rection or invasion could justify the use of these revenues for any other purpose than the payment of the State indebtedness. The original act an- thorizing the Sinking Fund was the work oft Jacob Fry, Auditor Gen- eral of the State in 1857. He is hardly remembered, though he deserves a statue. Itis amusing to find Repub- lican newspapers claiming credit for the payment of state debts as a meas: ure of Republican policy. It is true that for the greater part ot the time since 1861 the management of State administration has been in Republican hands. But there were cast-iron limi- tations for enforcing upon whatever party might be in power the necessity of provision for the State's liabilities. The Republican officials deserve no credit. Insofar as they have been able to divert the proceeds of State re- venues to partisan or personal uses they have not hesitated to do so. Whatever special credit attaches to any party for making permanent statu- tory provision for preserving the State’s credit and setting aside the necessary revenues for the final extinction of the State debt belongs to the Democratic party. Republican officials in Penn- sylvania have a magnificent record in the line of expenditure. The have trebled the burden of tax-payers and the cost of administration. They ought to rest satisfied with their legit- imate laurels, without trespassing upon ground where to set their feet is a dese- cration. A Quarter of a Million Words. The Mammoth Sunday Edition Promised by the Pittsburg Dispadi. Twenty-four pages of reading is what the Pittsburg Dispatch has prepared to give the readers of its Sunday edition. This means 192 columns or over 250,- 000 words. The Dispatch always led in this section and it proposes to keep the lead by unlimited expenditure of time and money. New literary features have been secur- ed and better news facilities added. Next Sunday, April 10, it will publish the first chapters of Herbert D. Ward’s story of Artic adventurein an air-ship entitled “A Dash tothe Pole.” This story promises to be the literary sensa- tion of the year. The Great Gubernatorial Controversy in Nebraska is at Last Ended. LincoLN, Neb., April 6.—The gub- ernatorial controversy is at last ended. The Supreme court to-day handed down a decision denying the applica- tion of John M. Thayer for a reopen- ing of the case. The court bases its opinion on the ground that a person who seeks by quo warranto proceed- ings to obtain possession of an office, held by another, must show that he has a better title to that office than the incumbent; that when Governor Thay- er abandoned the office in favor of Governor Boyd, be put himself in the light of a disinherited person and has | no ground for action. EA TY ETA ET EE ER A OR As, Moonshiners Thought to Have Captur< ed the Detectives. SoMERSET, Pa., April 5.—Up to a late hour to-night nothing kad been heard from the little band of detective men who left here last night to capture the | murderers of old man Hochstetter. It is. believed that they were surprised and captured by the moonshiners and that they will be held for aday orsoand then released. Miller and Pritts were seen in a lonely part of the mountains, on Sunday, by a minister and yesterday a photographer saw Miller at bis home, Sheriff Good says he knows where the moonshiners are secreted and will go after them just as soon as the expenses of the trip are guaranteed. He is await. ing the arrival of Special Officer Culbert- son. of the internal revenue department and will do nothing till he reaches here. Developments are coming to light which tend toshow the moonshiners’ gang contains not less than 800 or 400 mem- bers. Probably only twenty of this number have been engaged in the manufacture of illicit whisky but their secret is known to the gang. ADDITIONAL LOCALS. —— Uriah Gates, one of Half Moon’s. staunch “Jimmycrats” was in town on, ‘Wednesday. ——The good people of Lock Haven, shipped a car load of flour to the starv- ing Russia peasants yesterday. ——The name of C. A. Peters, of West Liberty, fowa, has been added to the WATCHMAN’S growing list. ——Gov. Pattison signed Charles Cleary’s death warrant, on Tuesday, and the young Renova boy must expiate the murder of Policeman Paul on. June 9th. ——Col. D. K. Tate, of this place. came within $99,70 of getting the con tract for the erection of the new school. house, in Lock Haven. The lowest bid- der was William Ely who figured the cost down to $14,971. ——Mr. F., F. Coudriet, a prominent citizen of Karthaus township, Clearfield county, and well known to many of the readers of the WArcEMAN, died in Coudersport, Potter county, on the 24th ult. at the residence of his son, whom he. was visiting. —— While working on the roof of Sechler’s house, on west Willowbank street, the foot rest broke precipitating Ollie Campbell to the porch roof, from which he bounded on to the ground. Fortunately he escaped with slight in- jury to his right arm. ——The rolling mill of the Valentine Iron Co., was discovered to be on fire, on Wednesday night, between twelve- and one o’clock, and only after the most strenuous efforts were the flames gotten within control and the building saved. The fire was discovered in that portion. of the mill near the wheel and itis not. known how it could have caught. ——A lively runaway excited pedes-- trians on Allegheny and High streets, on Wednesday noon. While deliver~ ing fish Orie Atwcod left his horse stand near the public school building and when he went to get into the wagon again it started off before he could pick up the lines. Being lame he thought it best to jump out and while doing so the wheels ran over his arm, cutting it badly. The horse continued on down to the Centre county bank. building, where it stumbled and turned a complete somersault. Some furniture. standing in front of E. Brown’s furni- ture store, was broken up in the flight. SPIRITUALISM AND OIL DRILLING.—. A Tyrone correspondent to the New York World gives the following singu- lar account of an incident which hap- pened down along the Juniata a few days ago : “Boring for oil has been begun along the Juniata river, in the belief that it. has been ordered by the spirit of John S. Isett, who died five years ago. Mr. Isett’s farms extend for more than a mile along the Juniata and back from it a full mile into the country. Spruce creek, a tributary of that river runs through them. Mr. Isett was a Spiritu- alist. He entertained spiritualistic mediums whenever they chose to come and supported lectures in the village hall. The only member of his own family who imbibed his faith was his son Jacob H, Isett. His lands extend down the river on the side opposite Spruce Creek station until they come to a narrow gorge in the mountains, where there is a strip of nearly level land the breadth of an ordinary field be- tween the foothills and the stream, and it is there that the oil is being sought for. Jacob H. Isett frequently receives letters purporting to have been written in the spirit land. A blank sheet of paper, securely sealed in an envelope, is sent to a medium and soon returned, not having been opened in the meantime, it is said, with the communciation written upon it. [t was in this way that Mr, Isett received the directions of his father to bore for oil. The letter designated the exact spot in which the hole was to be put. Mr. Isett has already bored to the depth of 300 feet. The work has been temporarily delayed by the break- ing of some machinery in the hole, but will be resumed. There are those who hope that the Spruce creek region will soon be covered with derricks and flow- ing with petroleum.”