Benoa fata BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —The Clearfield county Democrats nomi- nated a particularly strong ticket on Tues- day. —Spain dis preparing to send another hundred thousand martyrs into her Cuban death trap. —When ever the rule of a majority ceases to be the law of society then there is noth- Ing of civil liberty in it. —HANNA would be a very cross MARK if, perchance, there should not be enough X marks to carry his man through in November. : —Spain is hard after ships in which to transport her new army to Cuba. The Centre county Republicans will join in the search about November 4th. —Spring township must be a great dis-. trict in the eyes of Republicanism. Practic- ally three candidates for it and not a smell for the side of the mountain that gave HASTINGS 1073 votes in 1894. —It isn’t a very elegant expression but ,it is wonderfully to the point, the way NED BLANCHARD knocked the slop out of the remnants of the ‘‘hog combine,’’ in the North ward, on Saturday night. —The Republican papers are all busy telling the Democrats what to do at Chica- go. Advice has never been needed from such a source in the past and it is hardly probable that any will be needed at this time. —The Philadelphia Record need have little fear of the contradiction of its asser- tion that ‘no one has ever seen a Quaker beggar.”’ — Strange too, when nearly every bum on the road has a particular affinity for spirits. —Consul. General LEE bids fair to gain greater notoriety than the author of the ‘Letter that Never Came.” We would like to hear what his opinion of Cuba is. If any man is capable of judging whether or not a state of war exists he is. —MARK HANNA'S election to the chair- manship of the Republican national com- mittee is the reward he expected for his serv- ices to MCKINLEY. From that position, in the eventof the major’s election, he will dispense patronage to those who have been faithful. —There are a great many intervening ifs, but if JAcoB HARMAN, of College township, had been nominated for the sheriffalty by the Republicans, then if he could have been elected, it is rumored that Mr. FREDERIC DALE, of Lemont, would have been his deputy. —Every utterance of MCKINLEY’S since his nomination indicates his intent to dodge the currency question and try to run the campaign on the tariff issue. The tar- iff dug the political grave for one Republi- can presidential possibility and is_capable of doing another job of the same sort. —Ex-secretary WHITNEY’S assertion that he would notserve as President, even if elected, sounds very much as if he is really in earnest but we fancy that Mr. WHITNEY would not try to save himself from being carried off bodily to Washing- ton in event he should be put astride the Democratic donkey. —We trust that the Chicago convention, which is now only two weeks off, will recognize in ROBERT E. PATTISON a man eminently fit and safe to be the standard bearer of our party in November. On any platform Mr. PATTISON could be entrusted with the administration of the affairs of this government. —If HORACE BoIES, of Iowa, is not to be endorsed for President, by that State, because he stood for law and order as against mob violence during the great rail- road strike in Chicago, then he is a far greater man as plain HORACE BoIES than he could be, even as President of these United States. —Female street car conductors are an innovation at Norristown, Pa. The change _ is merely experimental, but is likely to re- sult in the permanent establishment of women on the street car lines. They are not supposed to be adepts at ‘‘knocking down”, but women have never failed to promptly catch on toany thing man can do. —=Spring township gave HASTINGS 337 votes in 1894, while Penns valley gave him 1073. Yet the Republican county conven- tion practically gave Spring township three nominations, while Pennsvalley was ignored. If our Republican friends intended giving their brethren on ‘‘the other side’’ a hint that they are not needed they might at least, not have made it so broad. —Superstition is said to be a sign of ignorance, yet there were lots of Republi- cans who sat in the court house, on Tues- day afternoon, with blanched faces, as they watched that swallow sweep gravely over their heads. It is an old saying that a bird’s flying into a house is a sure sign of death, and what could have been a more disturbing omen to our Republican friends than that their convention should fall under the spell. —Barring the fact that McKINLEY was nominated on the anniversary of the de- feat of NAPOLEON, whom he apes; Ho- BART, his running mate, is enough to make a JONAH out of the Republican ticket. The latter is the third man who has aspir- ed to be Vice President from New Jersey. FRELINGHUYSEN, who ran with CLAY in 1844, was the first. DAYTON, who ran with FREMONT, in 1856, was the second ; and hoth got licked. Now for HOBART and his NAPoLEON’S Waterloo. VOL. 41 CILAcrd STATE RIGHTS AND Sm —— BELLEFONTE, PA., J ——— m——— FEDERAL UNION. UNE 26, 1896. Their Weakness. One of the principal weaknesses of the position of the gold standard advocates is their failure, or inability to indicate to the public how they would supply the people with an adequate amount of money with which to do business. In this country, according to the reports of the comptroller of the currency, and the director of the mints, there was, all told, ‘on the 1st of January, 1895, but $600,000,- 000 in gold, including bars and minted money. Since that date the government has been compelled to gather up and fur- nish for shipment to Europe $200,000,000, reducing the total amount to $400,000,000. To this is to be added the gpnual output, which, according to official reports, amounts to $42,000,000 yearly, making us at the present time, the possessor of $463,000,000 in gold. Of this amount, $100,000,000 is required to be held as a reserve in the U.S. treas- ury, leaving for the requirement of the banks and the needs of the people $363,- 000,000. In round figures, ahout five dol- lars per capita, or less than one-half the money that any country on the face of the globe pretends to do business with, and less, by three-fourths the amount that we are now struggling to get along with. How we are to prosper if money is to be made scarcer or how the amount necessary for the needs of business is to be furnished, is what the advocates of the gold standard fail to explain. To issue paper money over and above the actnal amount of gold held ready to re- deem it, is simply to put upon the country that much fiat money of the cheapest and most baseless kind. What the people ask of the gold standard advocates is, not abuse of ‘‘populists,’’ ‘‘anarchists,”” ‘‘free silver cranks” and every one else who doesn’t agree with them but a plain, honest and understanda- ble, explanation of how they will furnish a sufficient amount of money, for the trans- action of the business of the country and keep the government and the people from being at' the mercy of the few who own and control the little gold we have. Will they, or can they make it ? Old and New Bugaboos. It has been truly remarked by a con- temporary that the Republican party could not successfully run a presidential cam- paign without a bugaboo. : Within our recollection they have had a number of large sized and able-bodied bugaboos in their political service, which they regularly brought out to .scare the timid and fool the ignorant whenever there was a President to be elected. Who does not remember the choice selection of alarm creators and fear inspirers which they had in use for at least twenty years after the war? Once every four years there was a fearful warning of the Democratic inten- tion to pay the ‘‘rebel’”’ debt and to pen- sion the ‘‘rebel” soldiers, and the Union veterans were notified that the Democrats were conspiring to deprive them of their pensions. These alarms were always ac- companied with a vigorous waving of the bloody shirt. There were other bugahboos, such as that the most cherished object of the Democratic heart was the destruction of American industries, and that the “‘free traders” were receiving large amounts of British gold to help them effect that ob- ject. These various bugaboos having been worked for all they were worth in many | campaigns have become thread-bare and fail to produce the old effects, and there- fore it is necessary to get a new lot. With this object BoB PORTER, the Republican Englishman whe was given the job of working the last census in the interest of a Republican tariff, was sent over to Japan and he returns with dreadful accounts of how the Japanese are preparing to flood this country with goods that will be sold so cheaply that all our mills and factories will have to stop work. He represents the. Japs as being able to almost live on air, and that a month’s wages of a Japanese workman would scarcely buy a breakfast for an American laborer. In view of this danger the working peo- ple of this country will be called upon to rally for MCKINLEY and protection in the coming campaign, and thus prevent them- selves from being thrown out of employ- ment by cheap goods imported from Japan. It is scarcely probable that this bugaboo, although brought all the way from Asia, will frighten the American people into Lo the trusts and monopolies another chance to rob them by the revival of Mc- KINLEY protection. ——The invitation of the St. Louis con- vention to the women of the country to help the Republican party redeem the land from Democracy will not win them over to protection and high prices. The influence of the petticoat element was felt in 1892, when it arrayed itself with the Democrats, and the women are intelligent enough to know that they got what they wanted in better bargains in everything. It Must be Avoided. There was much good sense accompanied by sound advice in an address delivered by ex-Gov. CAMPBELL some days ago to the Democratic inter-state association at Wash- ington, the chief burden of which was the folly of allowing the Democratic party to be split on a question of monetary policy when an occurrence so calamitous to the best interests of the country can be avoid- ed by reasonable concession and the exer- cise of a conciliatory spirit. There is every incentive to harmony when the immense value of the stake in- volved is considered, for the disruption of the Democratic party would sacrifice inter- ests-that are interwoven into the very text- ure of our free institutions. Why, there- fore, should such a sacrifice be made when there is no constitutional principle in- volved in the difference of opinion that divides the party? Itis a mere question of economy and expediency, such as Demo- crats have differed on before without think- ing of dividing themselves into hostile and opposing factions. : The great duty of upholding constitu- tional principles, of preserving the tradi- tions of a.purer era of politics, of guarding the treasury against the raids of thieves and the exhaustion of extravagant outlays, and of protecting the people against the goths and vandals of monopoly and corrup- tion, has devolved upon the Democratic party, and it would be a national calamity if its high service and incalculable useful- ness should be impaired by internal dis- sension that raay end in disruption. This must not happen on a inere ques- tion of policy. McKinley as the Gold Standard Bearer. What a queer figure BILL McKINLEY cuts on a gold standard platform. There could not be a more unique and incon- gruous position for a man whose acts and expressions on the monetary question were generally on the side of silver. It is true that the major was never capable of enter- taining profound views in regard to finance and on so abstruse a question as that of the currency, but such views as he was com- petent to entertain on questions of public policy, outside of the barbarism of tari taxation, were usually expressed in behalf of the white metal as a monetary medium. This probably did not.come from a settled conviction as to its merits, but being nat- urally a trimmer, he adapted his views to what he believed to be the prevailing partiality of the western people for silver. Therefor he has been found on all former occasions voting and speaking for that metal, even going so far as to say that ‘‘the Democratic party struck silver down.” In view of such indications of his senti- ments on the silver question, wasn’t there something almost comical in Senator LODGE, ToM PLATT and the other ‘‘gold-bug” magnates at St. Louis forcing the major onto a gold platform ? Both he and his manager HANNA were anxious to straddle the monetary issue, but against his own will and in direct conflict with his previous acts and expressions in favor of silver, he is made to pose on a gold platform as the standard bearer of the gold interest and the champion of ‘‘honest money’’ and a sound currency. There is no questioning McKINLEY’S sincerity as the apostle of tariff spoliation, but he is forced into an insincere and farcical position when he is made the bearer ote gold standard. Preposterous Gush. It strikes us that the Philadelphia Zimes gushes too much in its praise of the Re- publican national platform. In declaring that it ‘‘deserves the confidence of patriotic citizens of every political faith for its heroic stand for honest money,’ does it not over- look the fact that the currency plank of that platform was inserted after great hesi- tation as to the expediency of a straddle, and in opposition to the wish of both the nominee and his manager ? Wouldn’t it deserve more confidence as a gold platform if there had not been put on it a candidate who has been a free silver supporter in all his public acts and expressions ? The Times indulges in more gush and very foolish gush, at that, when it says : ‘MCKINLEY is now presented to the Amer- ican people as a candidate for President on the distinct issue of maintaining the gold standard of honest money.’” The truth is that MCKINLEY has been put ona plat- form which does not suit his views on the currency, if he really has any fixed views on that subject, and the only distinct issue he represents is tariff spoliation. He. used all his influence to make the money issue a subordinate one in the platform ; he would have preferred to straddle it, and it is his earnest desire, to make the revival of his monopoly tariff the leading issue of the campaign; This is so evidently the case, and so ap- parent to all intelligent observers, that it gives quite a comical appearance to the declaration of the Zimes that if no other candidate is presented on a platform as distinctly for honest money, it will support MCKINLEY for President and rejoice in his election. Slim Results for the Boss. It can’t be said that the Republican boss- esand ‘“favorite sons’ have come out of the skrimmage for the presidential nomina- tion with much glory or any improvement of their political prestige. Their attempt to corner the nomination has resulted in a failure that has given bossism a black eye. No other one of the syndicate has de- rived less profit from their unsuccessful operation in the political stock market than boss QuAy. His servile henchmen made a great parade of his candidacy, and the state machine was worked to the full- est extent of its power to give him a dele- gation that would be practically a unit in his favor, but at no time previous to the meeting of the convention was anybody of even ordinary discernment fooled into the idea that QUAY’s candidacy was anything else than a fake. Nothing was more evi- dent than that his visit to Canton, before the convention, was to ascertain the terms upon which he would be allowed to get in- to the MCKINLEY band wagon, and while his henchmen were hurrahing for him at St. Louis, and HASTINGS was ventilating his bladdery rhetoric in the ‘auditorium, extolling the presidential qualities of the Pennsylvania boss, QUAY’s chief solici- tude was to effect a dicker by which he might secure a share of the prospective spoils in the event of MCKINLEY’S elec- tion ; nor does it appear that the situation, with so overwhelming a majority for the Ohio candidate, was favorable'to his mak- ing a deal. Boss PLATT, of New York, won some distinction and gained prestige by helping to force MCKINLEY to abandon his intend- ed straddle of the silver question, and put- ting him on a gold platform against his will ; but the Pennsylvania boss gained nothing but the empty honor of his state delegation voting for him, and even this, small as it was, lacked the distinction of being unanimous, as the MAGEE and MAR- TIN faction voted for MCKINLEY. Putting all the results together, and tak- ing them as the sum total—of what le has madé out of his candidacy for President, QUAY does not appear to have increased his prestige or strengthened his position as a party boss. As to the spoils, if there are any to be divided, it doesn’t look as if he has secured a cinch on them. Dalzell’s Bad Break. Republican orators and organs are liable to make bad breaks in sounding the praise of MCKINLEY-ism. For example Hon. JOHN DALZELL was rather unfortunate in his allusion when he declared, in a recent speech, that MCKINLEY’S ‘‘name is connect- ed with a time when the whole heaven was aflame with the light of our furnaces, in a land where idleness was a stranger, and in- dustry, contentment and thrift furnished the surest guarantee of social order.”’ This is the kind of stuff that the Repub- lican spouters are going to din into the ears of the peoplé this summer, as if it were not a positive and admitted fact that there were more strikes, lockouts, wage re- ductions and labor troubles under the Mc- KINLEY tariff than during any equal per- iod of time in the history of this country. In the section of the State where DALZELL lives and where he had the brazen effront- ery to speak such praise of MCKINLEY-ism, there was a constant conflict on the subject of wages. The coal miners and coke burn- ers engaged in repeated strikes, .and the situation in those industries was a constant fight between the workmen and the operators who were reaping the advant- age of MCKINLEY protection while they were beating down the wages of their em- ployees. That the workmen in the iron and steel mills had the same difficulty is a notorious fact, the trouble usually break- ing out in strikes and in the Homestead case almost amounting to civil war. . Was this the ‘‘industry, contentment and thrift’’ under the MCKINLEY tariff to which Congressman DALZELL refers? Was this ‘‘the guarantee of social order” of which he boasts as the fruit of McKIN- LEY-ism, with strikes and labor riots all over the land, requiring troops to be called out in ten States, and 8,000 Pennsylvania soldiers in the field to force ‘contentment’, upon dissatisfied workmen at the point of the bayonet ? . These are the true facts of industrial his- tory, as recorded during the period of the McKINLEY tariff, and yet we may expect the whole country overrun this summer with lying blatherskites working McKIN- LEY’S tariff campaign, and uttering such stuff as that with which the Honorable (?) JOHN DALZELL has already started out. ——It takes a wife to make a man look up. IRV. WALKER, the Boggs township politician, thought his light ought to be given a chance to shine among the coal oil Legislators at Harrisburg, but the con- vention said ‘‘nit.”’ —The Emperor of Germany is beginning the stiidy of the money question because he is conscious of a growing need for bi- metallism in his country. This is Nothing New, Our Dan Knew it Long Ago. : From the New York Sun. It seems that these two glorious leaders of the hog combine, the Hon. Christopher Magee, of Pittsburg and the Hon. David Martin, of Philadelphia, are still alive and kicking, and that they have .succeeded in returning from St. Louis to Pennsylvania, where they are.once more raising the war cry against thes Hon. Matthew Stanley Quay, who gave them so artistic and finely executed a licking a little while ago. But some men are hard to satisfy, and of those some are these two. They howl for more combat with Mr. Quay. They depend upon the Hon. Marcus Atreus Hanna to boost them forward in the ranks of war. That chief of the western preserve is prob- ably aware that he has a considerable job on hand already without accepting any proposals for new labors. . Mr. Martin and Mr. Magee are liable to continue to squirm under the iron heel and toe of the Sage of Beaver unless they make peace with him and become his more or less trusty hench- men. He is an irritating man to fight. ‘Wholesale Depopulation. From the Philadelphia Evening Telegraph. The Japanese disaster tends to become more and more serious. From the very sparing accounts at hand it would seem to be, in point of fatality at least, the most frightful natural catastrophe which the world has known in modern time. Even in a land where they are said to have some 500 earthquakes every year such loss of human life is very extraordinary. The first reports placed the mortality at 10,000, but an official dispatch just received from Tokio through diplomatic channels men- tions 30,000 as the more likely figure. It is somewhat astonishing that the human race has been able to make such progress in a land Where the crust of the earth is so unstable. This great tidal wave which swept the Japanese coast towns was caused of course by a sudden change in the earth’s level. Either the land subsided or the bed of the ocean near-by was raised so that water was forced in shore. In either case there would be a great overflow, and if the land was thickly inhabited it is easy to see that the loss of life would be tre- mendous. Not Exactly. From the York Gazette. bo The American people do not ykt realize the danger that confronts them. Mark Hanna, millionaire monopolist, has suc- ceeded in getting the Republican party to nominate the very champion of monopoly and special privilege, and he has been put in charge of the campaign. Does anyone doubt where the money will coms from to run the campaign, and does anyone: doubt that if Hanna is successful he will give monopoly and special privilege full hance ‘to devour what is left of the prospefity of this poor tax-ridden country ? Is there any workingman such a fool as to believe that Mark Hanna is doing all this for him ? McKinley and the Trusts. From the Pittsburg Post. The nail trust has put itself in a position to help the McKinley exchequer in this campaign, as it has arranged with all possi- ble competitors and ‘‘guaranteed’’ its prices until the first of August. This is a trifle hard on consumers of nails—on everybody who wants to build a house or patch up a fence—especially as the nail pool has ad- vanced prices since May of last year 228 per cent on cut nails and 200 per cent on wire nails. But it sells nails to foreigners at a much less price—about a dollar a keg— than it does to American consumers. The nail trust is one of the institutions that will be able to spare much ‘‘fat’’ in: the frying of this year. oo Majority Rule Always. From the Lansford Record: Our esteemed and venerable friend, Capt. Rauch, of the Mauch Chunk Democrat, is displeased because the Record contends that the minority should submit to the majority in the coming national convention on the financial question. If the Democrat ad- heres to its gold doctrine on the ‘‘Pike’s Peak or bust’’ principle, it should pull in its party flag. Between a silver candidate on the Democratic ticket, and the McKin- ley straddler on the Republican ticket, Friend Rauch will likely take water or take to the woods. The Country Readers are the Best Read~ o ETS. F. H. Roberts in the Braymer Bee. The country newspaper of good standing, clean columns and fair circulation is the best advertising medium on earth. Its readers, as a rule, have time to read and do read what the business man who gets a daily and ‘skims’ it never thinks of read- ing viz : the advertisements. I have had farmers tell me that on rainy or stormy days they had read everything in the paper, from the date line to the last ad on the last page. Always the Way. From the Mifflintown Democrat and Register. It is: irony of fate. The Republicans made Utah a state for the express purpose of having it give them two Senators, one Representative “and three electoral votes. Yet in the first Republican Convention in which Utah ever participated as a State one of her Senators, her single Representative and half her delegation have abandoned the party, repudiated its platform and join- ed in a bolt. A Job Ready for Him. From the Washington Post. : Now that the Czar has been officially fit- ted up and is prepared to do business let him begin the good work of depopulating Siberia. i ——All Kinds of stocks have dropped since the Republicans ‘have declared for McKINLEY. and gold. Why this thus- ness ? ; Spawls from the Keystone. —A train at Tyrone fatally injured John Matta. —On July 2nd the West Chester state nor- mal school will celebrate its quarto-centen- nial. —While felling a tree near Allen’s Mills, Clearfield county, George Moore was struck on the head and killed. —Minks have been killing the young chickens at Auburn, and a war of extermina- tion has been inaugurated. —John Haviland ,of Sunbury, a Pennsyl- vania railroad brakeman, was killed by a fall from a box car at Lewisburg. —A high trestle on the Reading & Colum- bia railroad near Montello was discovered on fire, but a train crew saved it from ruin. —A fall of slag in the stack of the Car- negie steel works, at Braddock, instantly killed Albert Petersen and seriously injured three others. —An Altoona detective arrested John Scott and Alexander Johnson, two colored men, who assaulted Peter Aiken, at Kittan- ning Point. —The Republicans of Schuylkill county will hold a ratification meeting tonight at Pottsville, over the nomination of McKinley and Hobart. —Before any other members of his family were up, Charles Alcott, of Altoona, father of Alderman Alcott, hung himself with a piece of clothesline. —Dayvid Frazer, George Irvin and his sis- ter Cora arrested in Williamsport, are want- ed for check swindling in Potter county and also in Washington, D. C. —A chartar has been granted to the John H. Taggart publishing company, of Philadel- phia. The incorporators are William H. Taggart, George W. Sigler, Samuel H. Han- dy, Harry C. Taggart and Sarah C. Taggart. —The expenses of the Blair county semi- centennial exceed the receipts by about $1,- 000. About $6.000 was subscribed but only $5,000 could be collected. The cost of pro- viding meals for so many strangers and mon- ey lost on the souvenir, is said to be the cause of the deficit. . —The Goodyear lumber company is build- ing at Gilden, Potter county, one of the larg- est sawmills in that section. The mill will have three circular, two gangs and two band saws. Connected with the mill will be a large planing mill. It is thought that they will start on the first of September. —According to the statement given by an official of the Williamsport boom company, there are still over 80,000,000 feet of logs ly- ing between Williamsport and Clearfield. The greater number of the logs are in the river while a few million feet are in the trib- utary streams. A flood to float these logs in is anxiously awaited. - —Nelson Byers, of Williamsport, and his son-in- law, L. H. Allen, of Buffalo, have in- stituted two suits for damages against the Williamsport passenger railroad company for the killing of Mrs. Byers and her 3 year old grandson, by a car of that company in that city on June 15, 1895. The amount of dam- ages is not stated. The action is brought on the ground that the company did not have its car equipped with a fender. - —The maiden name of the wife of William McKinley, Jr., the Republican candi- date for the presidency was Saxton. She is a great grand-daughter of James Sax- ton, one of the early residents of the borough of Huntingdon. James Saxton’s son, John, . (Mrs. McKinley's grandfather) learned the printing business in the office of the Hunt- ingdon Gazette, then conducted by John McCahan. He removed to Canton Ohio, and established the Ohio Repository, a paper of wide circulation. : —Some time about 5 o'clock Saturday morning, Miss Myrtle Ickes,: daugh- ter of Squire Ickes, of Lewistown, arose in her sleep, found her way to the: room of Mrs. Barley, with whom she boards in Roaring Spring, where she has recently been employed in the blank book factory, opened a window and stepped out of it, falling twenty feet to the ground. She was awakened by the fall, and cried for help. Mrs. Barley was soon at the girl’s side, Miss Ickes fractured one arm and leg, and possibly sustained some internal injuries: = —Charles Swenson, a Swede, employed in the shops at Renovo, committed suicide by hanging Saturday aftérnoon, supposably from worriment over straitened financial matters. He procured several pieces of light rope and twisting them together wi to the water closet, where he committed the act. He was found by a member of his household, whose screams brought to the closet ’Squire Kerr. Mr. Kerr cut the man down. Death was caused by strangulation as the man’s feet were resting on the floor. An inquest was held and a verdict of suicide was rendered. Mr. Swenson was about 35 years old and is survived by his wife and six children. —A few days ago Jacob Stiger ; a Beech Creek railroad employe, residing at Monu- ment, went to a chest which stands in the mountain stream near his home and in which the meats and other articles of food used by the family are kept cool by the water from the brook which runs through one end and comes out the other. He opened the lid and was startled to see'a yellow rattle snake coil- ed on the slate in.the chest ready to send its poisonous fangs into any one who would molest it. Mr. Stiger quickly stepped back and picking up a club went for the reptile and killed it. The snake measured nearly five feet and had thirteen rattles and a but- ton on the end of its tail. —The Beech Creek tailroad’s corps of en- gineers, under the supervision of Chief Engi- neer J. R. McIntyre, is making a protracted survey in Cambria county, in the vicinity of Coryville, about seven miles from Patton, the terminus of the Beech Creek railroad’s oper- ations. The officials of the road will not state for what purpose the surveys are being made, but it is believed that a vast field is being opened tor running operations. It is rumored that the Vanderbilts, who control the Beech Creek, have secured options on large tracts of B vein coal lands in Cambria county, and that the present survey is for the purpose of building an extension of sixteen miles of railroad, which will tap these rich coal fields. The proposed road will extend from Patton, through Corryville, to a point not yet decided upon. These new coal oper- ations will greatly increase the tonnage on the Beech Creek road. The coal thus mined will be used for New York Central engine supply coal. “N