AE — Terms 2.00 A Year,in Advance . Bellefonte, Pa., Oct. 28, 1892. P. GRAY MEEK, - - - Eprror Democratic National Ticket. FOR PRESIDENT. GROVER CLEVELAND. OF NEW YORK. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT. ADLAI STEVENSON. OF ILLINOIS. State Democratic Ticket. EOR CONGRESSMAN AT LARGE. GEORGE A. ALLEN, Erie, THOMAS P. MERRITT, Berks. FOR SUPREME JUDGE. CHRISTOPHER HEYDRICK, Venango. FOR ELECTORS AT LARGE. MORTIMER F. ELLIOTT, Tioga. JNO. 0. BULLITT, Philadelphia. THOMAS B. KENNEDY, Franklin, DAVID T. WATSON, Allegheny, FOR DISTRICT ELECTORS Samuel G. Thompson, Clem’t R. Wainwright, Adam 8S. Rai Charles H. Lafferty, W. Redwood Wright, John O. James, William Nolan, Charles D. Breck, Wm. G. Yuengling, George R. Guss, Cornelius W. Bull, James Duffy, S. W. Trimmer, Samuel 8. Leiby, Azur Lathrop. T. C. Hipple, ; Thomas Chalfant, W. D. Himmelreich, P. H. Strubinger, H. B. Piper, Charles A. Fagan, seph D. Orr, Josey : John D. Braden, Andrew A. Payton, r John A. Mellon Michael Liebel, Thomas McDowell, Jamet K. Polk Hall, Democratic County Ticke FOR CONGRESS, Hon. GEO. F. KRIBBS, Subject to the decision of the District conference. For Associate Judge—C. A. FAULKNER, : JNO. T. MeCORMICK, For Legislature— }i AS. SCHOFIELD, For Prothontary—W.F. SMITH, For District Attorney—W. J. SINGER, Esq. For County Surveyor—HORACE B. HERRING, Democratic County Committee of Cen- tre County for 1892. Districts. Committeemen, Bellefonte N. W. J. C. Meyer. a S. Ww . 8. Garmam. 4 WwW. W eo. R, Meek. Centre Hall Bor. James Coldren. Howard Bor. .Abe Weber. Milesburg B. .15. H. Carr. Samuel Weiser, Jr James A. Lukens. .H. W. Buckingham. Frank W. Hess. .C. B. Wilcox, E. M. Griest. Millheim Bor... Philiosburg 1st W... Philipsburg 2nd W.. $ 3rd W. S. Philipsburg... Unionville Bor.. Benner... B. K. Henderson, Boggs N.P Philip Confer. a . P. .G. H. Leyman. . W.0. James W, Lucas. Burnside... William Hipple. .I. J. Dreese. J. N. Krumrine. N. J. McCloskey. Daniel I'reibelbis. Frank Bowersox, J. C, Rossman. David Sower. College E. P.. "WW, P., Curtin........... Ferguson E. P... W.P.. Greer «WV. William R. From. Haines E. John J. Orndorf. “* w.r C. A. Weaver. Half Moo David J. Gates, Harris ..James W. Swabb. Howard ...H. M. Confer. Huston ... ....Henry Hale. Liberty... ..W. W. Spangler. Marion .... ...James 3. Martin. Miles E. P. ..George B. Stover. # XN.P. ..J. B. Kreamer. ...U. 8. Shaffer. .«R. H. Reed. William Kerin, L. H. Wian. Taylor. Union Aaron Fahr. Walke: . H. McAuley. Worth... ...W. H. Williams. Playing a Confidence Game. When Mr. Jorn HawminLtoN was nominated by the Republicans,as their candidate for legislature, the Warcn- MAN was inclined to the belief that he was a gentleman of toc high character to stoop to trickery, and as a citizen too honest to attempt to deceive the peo- ple. His conduct since becoming a candi- date has caused us tojrevise this opinion and hereafter the WarcaMaN’s ideas of Mr.j HamiLroN as a man of high moral character, honest intentions and pure{motives, must be very differ- ent from what theyjwere before he un- covered himself Zand showed his real character. In not a single instance since his nomination, on questions. pertaining to the duties of the position he aspires to, or to the interests of the people of the county, has he been either honest, man: ly, or straight-forward. While he is heart and soul for the re-election of M.S. Quay to the Uhni- ted States senate, and pledged to vote for him for that position, he attempts to leave the impression with anti Quay Republicans and Democrats that he is not for him, and wonld cheerfully join & movement to secure his defeat. To the farmer who wants a re-vision of the tax-laws, so that corporations and other moneyed interests would be compelled to bear their share of the burdens of taxation, he makes pre- tense of favoring a change, but does not tell them that he has written and argued in favor of such laws as would pit all taxes upon improved property, and leave the wild lands of the county, in which he is largely interested, as well as capital invested in speculative enterprices, piractically without any taxation. : On the question of prohibition he out-Herods Herod, as an enemy of the ram traffe, when talking to those;whom he imagineslare against license, and to others argues in favor of a law that would put the privilege of selling in- A UE tn ST S— 3 TE. = na SI toxicating drinks upat auction, and of selling licences to maintain bars in ev- ery town in the county, to the indivi duals who would pay the most for them. .. On the fence question, a matter that interests every farmer in the county and is of vital import to the safety and prosperity of the people, while he is the most ultra opponent ot fencing, he professes to favor a local option law on this subject, knowing that no such law can be passed, and that if passed the supreme court decisions against the local option principle in legislation under the present constitution, would render it of no use to any com munity. And to cap the climax of his false pretenses and deceptions he has for the past ten days been travelling through Penn’s valley, clothed in a cast away suit and professing to be a plain, hard working every day farmer. The trath is, he has not done a day’s PO Tr er his acts, or can condone his offences, And just so surely can no Democrat, or no honest right-thinking citizen, vote for Representatives who are pledged to endorse him and his corrupt methods, by voting for him for United States Senator, as HaminroNn and DALE have promised and pledged themselves to do. Who is Responsible. The Homestead strikers are now un- der indictment for treason. However s incere they may have been in their conception of what they imagined to be “the rights of labor,” there can be no question, that they were altogether wrong in their violent interference with the rights of others. Whetker their action in support of their extra- ordinary view of the relation between employers and employes amounted te “treason,” is quite another question. The Chief Justice of Pennsylvania in his charge of the Grand Jury at Pitts- burg, left no room for doubt as to his opinion upon the subject, and it was unmistakably declared with all the if ever. He came from down the country some place, to the State Col- lege as a student in 1867 or 1868, He graduated at that institution in 1871, and since that date has made his living out of the college, first as a professor, then as business manager, and for the last few years asits treasurer. It is from this source that he draws his income and not as the result of any labor he does as a farmer While he is the owner of a good sized farm and one of the finest residences in the county, he is one of that class of farmers who never soiled their clothes with any kind of farm labor nor hardened their hands with any kind of toil. We doubt if he ever plough- ed a furrow or has done a day's work of honest, farm labor in his life. He is that kind of a farmer who takes the income, and requires the other fel- low to do the work--a theoretical, gen- tleman, “farmer,” who believes that manual labor is beneath his dignity, and is reported as asserting that 90 cents a day was wages enough for any man who wasn’t smart enough to make his living without work. And yet in the face of these facts he attempts to palm himself off upon the voters of the county as an every-day’ hard-working, poorly paid farmer. We appeal to the honest, industrious farmers and workirgmen of the county, to rebuke this kind of deception and to vote for their own interests by voting for men whose sympathies, feelings and interests are with them, as are those of Messrs. McCormick and SCHOFIELD, —— The trip recently made by gen- tleman farmer Jorn HamiLtoN, down Penus valley, dressed in old clothes, palming himself off as areal, every-day working farmer, will fool no one but Mr. Hamitton himself. He imagined that he could deceive the honest farmers of that val ley into the belief that he was one of them and deserving of their support in consequence. When he reads the re- turns from that section he will discov- er how badly he was fooled in imag ing he was dealing with men who could not see through such shams. a ——— Are You For Quay. When a Democrat comes to think about it, that a vote for either of the Republican candidates for legislature is a vote for M. S.Quax for United States senator, he will be a queer kind of Dem- ocrat who casts it that way. In fact he will be no Democrat at all. There might be atime when no po- litical significance attached to a vote for Representative, and when men might forget their party allegiance and pay a personal compliment toa friend, without injury to his party or treason to his principles; but when the fight is made by the Republicans, for a member of the Legislature, solely to elect Quay to the United States Senate, and prevent an honest apportionment of the State that would give to the Democracy a fair show of representation in the House, the Senate and Congress, no one who has a particle of Democracy about him, or who regards the welfare of the peo. ple or the honor of the State, could think for a moment of doing so. A vote for either Hamivrox or Dare in November, is as direct a vote as can bz cast for M. S. Quay for United States Senate. It is a vote against any change in the unjust and partisan ap- portionments, and a vote to harrass and hamper in every way, that partisan re resentatives can, every effort ofa Dem- ocratic Governor to benefit the people and do credit to the Commonwealth, Is there a single Democrat in the county who has forgotten the warfare that Quay has always made upon the Democratic party; the efforts he has resorted too to bring about the defeat of Democratic principles; the extent to which he has gone to defraud the Dem- ocratic orgamization and Democratic people of victories honestly won, or the methods he has employed to defeat the will of the masses, corrupt elections and disgrace the State? Surely no Democrat has forgotten work,as a farmer,in twenty-five years— | weight of the authority ot his high office. It seems like a condemnation from the bench before the fair trial to which these men are entitled. But that all their legal rights will be ob- served in the conduct of their trial, we bave no doubt. Itis the highest duty of a Judge, sitting in a Criminal Court, to see to it that the citizen whose liberty is imperiled, has the benefit of every doubt, and is not convicted with- out clear and convincing proof of guilt. There can be no question of the entire sincerity of these misguided men, in the belief. that other men, who sought work on terms they had refused to ac- cept, were ‘‘invaders’’ and robbers, who were coming to drive them from their homes and impoverish their wives and children. That they had an extraordi- nary theory of the “rights ofthe Ameri- can workingmen,” anda vague, but entirely sincere conception of certain privileges guaranteed to labor under the laws of Protection, is beyond all ques- tion. They seriously and earnestly un- dertook to preserve peace and order in the town of Homestead, and they calm- ly and deliberately prepared to lay down their lives if necessary in defense of “‘the rights of labor” and the homes which the “invaders were coming to destroy.” And it may be profitable to consider whence arose their strange theory of “rights” in this matter, and their mar- velous conception of the reciprocal rights and duties of the employer and his employes. The newspapers, the orators, and the statesmen of the Republican party, for many years past, have been indus- triously engaged in teaching the pro- tected laborer that the one end and aim of Republican legislation has been to “protect the working man,”” to preserve Lim from the competition of cheap foreign labor, and to secure for him a continuance of the high wages he en- joyed under Republican Tariff laws. The prosperous condition of the country has been attributed to the continuance of a system which has prevented com- petition—‘‘for the benefit of the work- ingman.” These men have taught, that competition is not the life of trade, but the death of-it. The law of supply and demand, eternal and immutable as any other natural law, has been persis- tently denied, and it has been falsely declared unto them, that the price of labor could be and was fixed and de- termined by laws of man’s contriving— such as this absurd and unjust Me- Kinley bill. This enjoyment of high wages under Republican laws has been declared to be ‘‘the workingman’s right,”” and he has been appealed to, in fervid orations and specious editcrials to ‘preserve his home,” to “save his wife and children from hunger and nak- edness,” and to secure for himself a con- tinuance of *‘the high wages and steady work secured to him by the Republi- can party.”’ So far, indeed, has this idea of treating the proposition of com- petition in the labor market with scorn and contempt been carried, that the President of the United States has not hesitated to say, “A cheap coat makes a cheap man’’—as though, men who would sell their labor cheaply, were on- ly to be despised and condemned, The men of Homestead had been taught by the Republican party that the Tariff tax, was a tax for their benefit, and that the manufacturer was but a Trustee who collected the enormous fund for their special use. . No good comes of lying. All this system of fraud and false pretence was deliberately contrived and carefully carried out for the purpose of deceiving the working people into voting the Re- publican ticket. For many years, this scheme has been successful. The peo- ple were cheated into the belief that any interference with Tariff taxation would bring ruin and disaster on the country, and reduced labor to a. condition of pauperism. At length, in 1887, the bold, fearless utterance, of a man who ‘“‘would rather be right than be Presi- dent,” exposed the lie of “Protection for the working-man,” and Grover Cleveland’s campaign of education be- gan; The defense of Republicanism was to add lie to lie, and fraud to fraud. In 1888, Mr. Harrison was elected by protected laborers on the distinct pro- mise of continued work and high wages. The men employed by Carnegie & Company voted for him to defend their homes, to secure the tax imposed for their benefit (as they were taught) and to prevent the disastrous results which the Republican party assured them would follow the competion of cheap labor. And it is not difficult to under- stand how the false position of the strik- ers at Homostead seemed to them to be a perfectly natural one, in which they would be supported by the Republican party—whose doctrines they were car- rying into practical effect. For every false word and unrighteous act, the penalty has to be paid at last. Not always, indeed, by those who are most guilty, but paid by some one. Lies and frauds bear within themselves the seeds of retribution. The blood shed at Homestead cries out from the ground against the Republican party to-day. But the refuge of lies is swept away at last, and the end of the wicked system which is responsible for the labor-troubles in Pennsylvania is close “at hand. ‘of engine 538, which was pulling the A Railroad Horror at Shawmont. Many Killed and Hurt. An Express Plunges Into a Coal Train. Fire Adds to the Terrors Two Consumed After the Smash-up. Police Take Charge of the Bodies—A Dozen of the Injured Removed to St. Timothy's Hospital. PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 25th, 1892.— An express train dashed into a coal train at Shawmont (near Manayunk) on the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, at 9.45 c¢’clock this morning, killing several passengers, and a score or more were badly injured. It was one of the worst wrecks the Reading road has suffered in this vi- cinity of recent years. Cars wera piled up two stories high, and the cries of the injured could be heard a long distance down the track. Fire added to the awful terrors of the situation, two cars being entirely con- sumed. A dozen of the injured were removed to St. Timothy’s Hospital. The police took charge of the persons killed outright. The express train was from Shamokin and due at Broad and Callowhill streets station at 9.30 A. M. M. F. Bonzano, assistant road super- intendent of the road, was on the scene, directing movements. The cause of the accident was due to disobedience of orders by the engineer freight. He had received orders to remain at Pencoyd until after No. 2 train, run- ning from Conshohocken to West Falls, on the nourch-bound track, had passed that point. He failed to do so and No. 2 run into his train, causing the awful wreck and such terrible loss of life. The first report sent in this morning said that from fifteen to twenty had been killed and about twenty injured. The second report to the main office of the company states that from seven to ten were killed. The third report, furnished by Mr. Bonzano, states the real number of per- sons killed is seven, five of whom were passsengers, one ofthe express train's crew and one of the freight. SOME OF THE KILLED. Thomas Welsh, the fireman of the express train, was crushed in his en- gine, while Jacob Kilrain, a brakeman on the frieght, was caught between two cars and horribly mangled. Two women, supposed to be mother and daughter, named smith of Phenix- ville, and Daniel J. Herr, a Harrisburg lawyer, were among the killed on the express. Miss Sides had her right leg broken in the awful crash and was cne of the many wounded taken to St. Timothy’s Hospital. President McLeod and Superintedent Bonzano are at the scene, doing all that is possible to get the matters righted. It is expected that the south-bound track will be cleared this afternoon. Three of the jurymen doing service in the United States Circuit Court were passengers on the wrecked train coming to this city. Two of them were Charles Bensinger and Hugh M. Coxe. The other’s name was not ascertained. None of them were in the slightest way in- jured, but they suffered a bad scare. FULL LIST OF INJURED. The full list of the injured now at St. Timo- thy’s Hospital, is as follows : M.D. Cowder, married, of Harrisburg. Mr.and Mrs. Moritz Lippert. Mrs. Mary Tease, widow, aged 50, of Valley Forge and two children. H.C. Prince, aged 27, married of 1515 Per- kiomen street, conducter on passenger train. Annie E. Sides, aged 43 of Reading. Mary C. Prettyman, aged 36, married of Pottstown. Ella Devine, aged 27, 2417 Perot street. Annie Kemp, single, aged 33, of Harrisburg. William H. Embrace, aged 33, of Reading. James E. Berfield, aged 29, of Renovo. Thomas Fitch, engineer of freight train. Howard Gottscholi, married of Reading. Dr. James E. Wright of Phoenixville, both legs broken. William H. Decker, aged 32, Pottstown. James A. Chillson, aged 27, married ; em- pliyed on the Reading Road. W. 8. Jarrett, hand cut off. John E. Wincoop and three others, who are now unconscious. Nearly all are now under the influence of ether and are seriously injured. HOW THE CRASH CAME, The accident occurred just after the freight train had passed through the Flat Rock tunnel. It had gone about thirty car lengths from the tunnel when the express swept into view around the curve. The engineers of the two trains ap- plied the air brakes and sanded the tracks, but all to no avail, the crash coming in a few short seconds. WRECKAGE SET ON FIRE, The details may thus be briefly stated : The incoming passenger train was the express leaving Shamokin at 5 A. M , due at Broad and Callowhill at 9.30 A. M. At9 A. M,, as it was about enter- ing the tunnel to the north of Mana- yunk, it came in collision with a coal train jast emerging. The force of the meeting was terrific, for the coal cars and coaches were jam- med into u huge mass, with a wrecked locomotive pushed on top. The glow- ing coals from the fire box were scatter- ed broadcast, and within a few moments the debris was on fire. The passenger train was known as’ the “Through Express No. 2,” and usually runs very full. This morning its number of passengers rather ex- ceeded the average, and the train was coming in full when it was brought to a sudden and direful halt at the en- trance to the tunnel. The Reading officials at the Fourth street office gave out this statement of the cause of the disaster: ‘The south- bound track was completely blocked by loaded freight cars, so that it was neces- sary to run the south-bound express from Shamokin on the north-bound track,” : In the third car of the express was found a pretty little babe. It was crying heartily. To whom it belonged is not known, but it wus taken in carge by a man in crowd, who will return it to its parents when discovered. J. Clayton Keppler, baggage master of the express, is reported as being among the killed. SA Forest Fires. Reaping, Pa., October 23.—Fierce fires among the timber are raging at Mt, Penn and Neversink mountain here to- night, and a large number of men are out fighting the flames to prevent: their | spreading to valuable buildings. includ. ! ing several summer resorts. An i Mrs. Harrison Dead. She Expired Early Tuesday Morning After Long And Patient Suffering—It Was at Twenty Minutes of 2 o’ Clock That Her Soul Departed from Its Mortal Tenement and Passed Into the Other World.—Her Death Had Been Long Foreseen and When it Cams It Was Not a Surprise.—Sketeh of her Life. WasHINgTON, Oct. 25.—Mrs. Harri- | son is no more. At 1,40 a.m. came the end. For the second time in the history of the White House a presi- dent's wife has died within its walls. Mrs. Harrison metdeath with the pa- tience and resignation of a devout Christian and her last days were com- paratively free from pain. For twenty- four hours the president and family had been almost constantly at her bed- side awaiting the end. Last night was without special incident, but late and | earlv, so frequently that he could have slept but little it at all—the president was in and out of the sick chamber and was neveraway for any length of time, A SKETCH OF HER LIFE, Mrs. Harrison, whose maiden name was Carrie Scott, was born at Oxford, a small town in Ohio, nearly 60 years ago. Her father, Rev. J. Witherspoon Scott, was principal of the female col- lege which was then run in conjuction with Miami Unversity. When Carrie had grown to the age of young wom- anhood there came to the University one Benjamin Harrison who soon evinced a decided liking for the win- some daughter of the professor. Their friendship grew and ripened into love which was consumnated in their mar- riage on October 20, 1853. The honey- moon was spent at the Harrison home, at North Bend, below Cincinnati. In the following March they moved to In- dianapolis where Fenjamin began the pratice of law. His exchequer at that time amounted only to $800, a legacy which some old ancester had bequeath - him. On August 13th, 1854 their first child, Russell, was born. As time passed prosperity smiled up- on them. The husband’s law prac- tice grew and he acquired a degree of prominence when sent to the United States senate in 1881. At Washington Mrs, Harrison at once became recog- nized as a leader, a woman of rare tact and an earnest worker for charities. When she took up her duties as first lady of the land ber health seemed of the best, but prostrated with the death of her sister, Mre. Lord, which oceur- red on Dec. 10th 1889, she recovered only to beseized with the Grip. The Californian trip was taken upon her recovery, butshe brought back a trou- blesome cough which caused much un- easiness among her friends. It grew until it became necessary for her to give up her social duties and retire to the home at Loon Lake. There the ra- vages of the disease did not slacken and realizing that the end was near she requested that she be taken home to die. Her return to Washington was sad in the extreme for all seemed to realize that the end was very near. In appearance she was a type of matronly beauty. In figure she show- ed the generosity of nature and in mind nature’s equal beneficence ex- panded by training in the acquirements of a liberal education drawn from the broadest opportunities. A lavish growth of hair silvered with the threads of a little over half a century of life and floating in curly waves ov- er a well shaped head and ending in a graceful coil, her regular features dark expressive eyes, formed a piciure of ripened womanhood. She had a voice softened by the instincts of a gen- tle nature and a gift of conversation which, while animated, was thought- ful. Her inclinations were toward art and her talent for painting 18 said to have been quite rare. In the domestic circle she was a simple, loving mother and the sweet traits which developed when she did her own work in the humble little Indianapolis hoge made her loved as the mistress of the White House. THE FUNERAL. The funeral services were held in the East room of the White House, yesterday morning, conducted accord- ing to the Presbyterian forms by the Rev. Dr. Tennis 8. Hamlin, pastor of the Church of the Covenant, on Con- necticut avenue, of which the President and Mrs. Harrison have been regular attendants. The body did not lie in state, but was takenimmediately to the special which is now carrying the fun- eral party to Indianapolis. The train is made up of a combina- tion baggage and drawing car, three sleepers, a dining car, an observation car, in which the body lies, and the President's private car. It left Wash- ington yesterday morning at 11:30 and will arrive at its destination to-day at 9:30. The President, his family all excepting the little grand children, a few personal friends including the vice President, members of the cabinet and their families are the only members on the funeral train. At 10:30 to-day the church services at Indianapolis will be- gin. They will take place in the First Presbyterian church of Indianapolis, on the corner of New York and Penn- sylvania streets. The Rev. M. L. Haines, pastor of the church, will offi- ciate, The body will tiren be taken to Crown Hill cemetery and interred, af: ter which the President will retarn to Washington. The remains of Mrs, Harrison lie in a casket made of Spanish red cedar covered with fine black broad- cloth, It has a copper metallic nner case, hermetically sealed, and lined with cream tufted satin, The exterior of the casket . has no orsamentation whatever, except haudles, which run its tull length, and a solid silver oxydized plate “bear- ing this inscription : ] CAROLINE SCOTT HARRISON, wife of Benjamin Harrison, Died October 25, 1892. A view of the casket impresses one | with its simplicity and elegance. There is no ‘trace of ostentation; and in the oxydized bar - a I AR ET all of these respects itis in full keep ing with the'life and character of her who will make it her last home. The i travellin z case is also made of Spanish { red cedar, highly polished with brass I handles and corners. This case is said to be one of the finest ever con- structed. Fifty Thousand Drowned. Great Floods in China and One Million People May Die. SAN Francisco, Cal., Oct. 23. —Ter- rible accounts of the loss ot life and property, caused by the breaking of the banks of tae Yellow River which is aptly called “China's Sorrow,” come by letters from the flooded section. It is only three years since the whole | basin of the river was flooded, and now comes a new flood fully as disastrous. FIFTY THOUSAND PEOPLE DROWNED. The flooded districtjis about 150 miles long, by 30 miles wide, and is estimated that over 50,000 people have been drowned, and that fully 1,000,000 will starve to death unless the Chinese government turnishes them food from now till next spring. nese figures furnish some idea of the extent of the calamity in single vil- lages in which the whole loss of life at Johnstown, Pa., is surpassed. The work of strengthening the embank- ment of the river was poorly done three years ago, and the high water this sea- son swept away the dykes as though they were made of straw. In several districts the water is 15 feet deep, and whole families are perched on the roofs of their houses. Ouly the most substantial structures resist the action of the water, the mal jority of the houses are crumbling away and carrying the wretched people to death. em——cr—— Says Cleveland Will Gain. New York, October 23.—Demoecra- tic national headquarters to-day issued the following : Kx-congressman Char- les H. Turner, who has just returned from a three weeks’ tour in the western part of the state, was a visitor at nation- al democratic headquarters. He said ; “I find that Mr. Cleveland is going to gain a great many republican votes. The farmers have not been pleased with the workings of the McKinley bill and there is a feeling among the republican farmers that tariff reform would be best for them. I feel sure that Mr. Harri- son’s vote of four year’s ago will be cut down at least 15,000 in the rural districts. He will lose more than that proportion- ately in the cities in the state. 1 cannot see how it is possible for him to come down to the Harlem river with more than 68,000 majority. I have person- ally found a great many cases of former republicans voting with us on the tariff owing largely to the decline of farm values, and this is true in the heavy ropublican counties. I have not found a republican county where the republi- they would get the same majority as they did 1n 1888.” Mr. Cleveland's Condolence. New Yorg, Oct. 25.--Mr. Cleve- land sent the following despatch to President Harrison this morning : “To Benjamin Harrison, Executive Mansion Washington ; “I hasten to assure you of my sincere sympathy in the hour of you terrible bereavement. GROVER CLEVELAND.” For a Limited Time Only. From the New York World. The increased prosperity of the Z7i- bune printers doesn’t date back to the passage of the McKinley law. It be- gan shortly after editor Reid was nom- inated for office, and will very likely cease after he is defeated. ADDITIONAL LOCALS. ——-Many Belletonte store’s are now illumined by the arc light. It seems to be a great improvement on the incandes- cent. ——Mrs. Judge Riley, of Boalsburg,. was a visitor on Tuesday. Mrs. Riley is well up in politics, as every true American woman should be. ——F. P. Blair. & Co., jewelers, put a new sign out in front of their store, on the corner of Allegheny and High streets, on Monday morning. Itisa large gilt clock which stands on an iron pedestal about six feet high. The clock is supposed to be a “dummy,” as such signs usually are, but when walk- ing rear it the “tick, tick, tick,” which is plainly heard, soon attracts your at. tention and upon looking at its face you see the correct time. It was made at the Phenix planing mill, in this place, after the Louis XIV model. The centre of the wooden case is mortis- ed and in that opening Thos. Moore has placed the clock works. The sign is ornamental as well as useful, for pedestrians can see the correct time even when the court house clock is hidden from view by leaves. ——Tor abolit two weeks previous to last Sunday workmen were busy mortis- ing and preparing lumber for a new frame rail-road trestle that spans Spring creck just above the passenger station, in this place. Oa Satarday evening the timber was all ready just to lay in its place on the piles, in fact the bridge stood on the working trestles just as it was to be placed when completed. Trains'ran in over the B. N. & L. as usu- al, on Saturday . Bright and early Sun- day morning a gang of men went to ~ work tearing. off the rotten timber in the old structure and before night it was replaced by the new. Thus com- pleting ‘the “work without delaying trains a minute. The trestle is 120 feet long. can leaders were willing to say that.