Beworralit atc Bellefonte, Pa., May 21, 1897. GUARDING THE TONGUE. If each of us, as we pass through life, Would bridle and curb the tongue, And speak of only the pleasant things To be said of every one, What a wonderful difference there would be Between this world of ours And the paradise it might become With all pathways strewn with Howers! How surely a little reflection Will show us as plain as the day The mistakes we made when we hastily Allowed our tongues full ‘syay. When the day is done and we think it o'er Ah, me! that it should be true— 2 There are few of us who can honestly say There is nothing we would undo. Too often the faults we clearly see ! In others are faults of gur own— ' And those who dwell in i of glass Should be wary in casing a stone. So, have charity, much gharity, , The loveliest virtue of all, And look well to the member unruly, For it’s prone to slip and fall. “I allus, held,’ said the Chronic Loafer, as he stretched his legs along the counter and rested his back comfortably against a pile of calicoes, ‘‘that they ain’t no seech thing as a roarinborin allus. I know some sais they is electric lights, but when I seen that big un last night I said to my missus, an’ IT hol’ I'm right, thet et was nothin, but th’ iron furnaces over th’ mo’ntain. Fer, s’pose, ez’ th’ teacher sais, they is lights up et th’ north pole, does you uns believe cou see -’em all thet distance? Well, now !’ He gazed impressively about the store at the close of this discourse. The Miller, the Shoemaker and the G. A. R. man were dis- posed to agree with him, but the School Teacher was sarcastic. “If you had ever studied physical geog- raphy,” he said. ‘‘vou would know that the auror. borealis is not a light made upon terra firma, but a peculiar magnetic condi- tion of the atmosphere for which there is no apparent accounting.” He looked to- ward the Chronic Loafer. “And th» man- ner in which you pronounce it is exceed- ingly ludicrous It is not a roarinborin always. It is speed a-u-r-o-r-a-b-o-r-e- a-l-i-s.” The Tinsmith, who was seated upon a nail keg, rubbing his hands in the warm rays of the stove, chuckled softly. The Chronic Loafer noticed him and felt con- vinced that the correction of his own gram- mar had caused the other’s mirth. ‘‘What’s you uns so tickled about now?" he asked grufily. “I was jest thinkin,”’ the Tinsmith re- plied, his countenance assuming its nat- ural expression, ‘‘of the time my ole frien’ Quincy Murthersbaugh spelled down John Jimison, who tot up to Happy Grove school. He done et on thet very word. My, but thet there was a bee.’’ ‘Now, ’fore you git grindin’ 'way— sence you’ve got on spellin’—I want ter tel a good un on 7 *‘Let him tell us about Quincy Muthers- baugh,’’ the School Teacher interposed, de- cisively. ‘“‘Your good un can keep.” Compelled to silence, the Chronic Loafer rolled over on his back and gazed dej ectedly into the dim recesses of the ceiling, while the Tinsmith began : “Some folks is nat’ral spellers, jest as others is nat’ral musicians. Ag’in, et’s jest as hard ter makea good speller hy edication as et is ter make a good bass horn player. Fer a feller that hain’t thet inborn idee of how many letters is needed ter make a world’ll never spell no better than th’ man thet haint a nat’ral sense of how much wind’s needed for a note’ll play a bass horn.” : “I cannot wholly agree with you,’ in- terrupted the school teacher. ‘‘Givea child first words of one syllable, then two ; then drill them in words ending in tion until “We won’t discuss thet, Teacher, fer et don’t effect our case. You never seen th’ like. John Jimison was a natural speller. Give him a word of six or seven syllables an’ he’ spell et out like et was.on a blackboard right before him. When he was 20 he hed spelled down all the scholars in Happy Grove, an ’d won ’hout six bees. Then he went to the Pikestown Normal school, out in the western part of Pennsyl- vania. When he come back you never knowed th’ beat, he hed studied Latin and algerbray, but I guess he must a spent con- siderable time a-brushin’ up his spellin’, fer there was only one fellow ’bout these | parts who could keep up to him fer any time at all. He was my friend Quincy Muthers- baugh. You uns knows Quincy. He tot two winters up et Kishikoquilla school, and went west after he mawried. He was a powerful good feller—still—and a fine teacher, an’ speller-—but John Jimison had th’ advantage of a normal school edication, : an’ know’d it. fer you uns never seen th’ like of th’ way he kerried on when he was teachin’ ter Happy Grove. “Thet was th’ winter we had so much snow. It had drifted in th’ roads, so we drove through th’ fields (ef you uns re- member. What with church soshibles an’ singin’ school and spellin’ bees they was a heap sight going’ on. ‘Not a week passed but me an’ Quincy Muthershaugh went some’eres, an’ before I know’d et both him and John Jimison was keepin’ company with Hannah Ciders. She was jest as pretty as a peach, plump an’ rosy, with th’ slikest nat’ral hair an’ teeth you ever seen. She was powerful fond of edication, so when them two teachers was | after her she jest couldn’t make up her mind. She favored both. But et seemed ter me like Qunicy was her favorite with- out her knowin’ it. He'd go to see her and set down an’ never say nothin much ; | -but she kinder tho’t him pleasant comp’ny. | He was good-lookin’ an’ sure an’ no fool. | Jimison was amusin,’ tolerable in his looks an’ hed th’ advantage of a normal school | edication, and kinder dazzled her. Et! allus ’peared ter me, still, as if he was a bit | conceity, but then he took with th’ girls. | “Hannah Ciders didn’t know which of | them two to choose. [Et seems she figured | on et all fall an’ well inter th’ winter. She | begin ter get thin an’ lose all her color, an’ | both them fellers was near wild with anx- iousness an’ continual quarrelin’. Then what yer ’spose they done ?”’ “E¢’ll take a long time fer ‘em to do | much, th’ way you tells et,’’ the Chronic Loafer grumbled. ‘She give out,’ eontinued the Tinsmith, not heeding the interruption, ‘‘that she'd take th’ best edicated.. Thet tickled Jimi- son, who blowed round ter all his friends how he was going ter win Hannah. Quincy, he jest grit his teeth an’ said he was ready. He was goin’, he put et, ‘like th’ male knights of old, ter tilt in th’ turning months fer his lady.” They agreed ter hev it out on th’ quiet at th’ big spellin’ between their schools th’ followin’ week. I thot Quincy was gone. He jest went ter work. though, an’ for severa] days before th’ bee I seen nothin’ of him. He was stedyin’ the spellin’ book. ‘“The night come, an’ such a crowd as they was et th’ Happy Grove school. They was sleighin’ and fer a quarter of a mile in front of th’ buildin’ they was nothin’ but horses hitched ter the fences. Th’ school room was all decorated with greens an’ lighted with ile lamps fer th’ occasion, an’ was jest packed. All th’ seats was filled with girls, and th’ men was lined up four deep ’long th’ walls an’ banked up on top of one "nother at th’ back. On one side of th’ platform, settin’ on a bench ’long under the black-board, was th’ sixteen best scho- lars of th’ Happy Groveschool, led by John Jimison. He was smilin’ an’ conferdent an, gazin’ longin’ at Hannah Ciders, who was on one side of th’ front seats an’ ’pear- ed rather nervous. He was all togged out in a new Prince Albert coat fer her benefit. “I was standin’ be th’ stove meltin’ th’ snow off me boots, when I had a few wopds with Quince Muthersbaugh. He seemed jest a little excited, an’ ’lowed et ud come out all right. Then he he took his seat with his sixteen scholars on th’ other side th’ platform an’ the proceedin’s began. ‘Teacher Long from over in Lemon township, called out th’ words from a speller, while me an’ another feller kept tally. The first word given out was sou- peny, an’ Quincy missed et. ‘s-u-p-e-n-a.’ I jest felt sick when I mark- ed one down against his side. Jimison took her, spelled her all right, an’ coni- menced ter smile. Muthersbaugh looked solemn. The feller next on his side spell- ed supersedes correct, while th’ man next John Jimison missed superannuation, and then Happy Grove and Kishikoquillas was even. They kep’ thet up an hour an’ a half, and I tell yer et was most excitin’ ter see them trained spellers battlin’ when they quit Happy Grove hed two les misses then Kishikoquillas. Jimison com- menced ter smile triumphant, but Quince didn’t do nothing ’cept set there quiet like. ‘‘After a recess of ten minutes they be- gin ter spell down. All the scholars lined up in a row and whenever one missed a word they hed to go set in th’ audience. They spelled an’ spelled, tell finally they was no one left but Quiney Muthersbaugh an’ John Jimison, jest standin’ there glar- in’ et each other an’ singin’ out letters~¥t was a grand sight. Hannah Ciders was pale and tremblin’, for she knowed the val- ly of an idle word then. Th’ audience was most stretchin’ ther necks outen joint, they was so interested. Two lamps went out an’ no one fixed ’em ; the air was jest blue with th’ steam made by the snow meltin’ off the fellars boots, and the stove begin to smoke, and the room was suffocatin’ but no one thot ter put up a winder. the excite- ment was so bad. ‘‘Sech words as penultimate, concatena- tion, pentateuch an’ silhoutte come dead easy ter them teachers. They kep’ glarin’ et each other and spellin’ like their life de- pended on et. Poor Long's voice got weak- er and weaker a givin’ out words. I was thet nervous Icould hairdly see. They spelled all the ations and entions, all the words endin’ in ism, dle and ness, tell et seemed they'd use up the book. Quincy was gettin’ more excited ; Jimison’s knees was tremblin’ visibly. . ‘‘Then Long give out Rorybory Allus. You could heard a pin drop in thet room. Jimison he begin slow, as ef it was dead easy : ‘A-r-o-r-a, Aurora: b-o-r, Aurora Bor ; e-a-1-i-8, Aurora Borealis.’ ‘They was a mumble went over the room, and he seen he was wrongan’ yelled: ‘A-u I mean !’ *‘Too 1d%®, says Long. Only one chanc’t et a time tell one or the other spells et. Th’ gentleman who gits et right first wins, accordin’ ter rules. ‘“‘Jimison was white as a sheet an’ his face and hands was a-twitchin’ as he stood there glarin’ et Quincy. Muthersbaugh looked at the floor like he was stedyin.’ I seen Hannah Ciders lean fora’d and grip the desk with her hands, and then I know’s she’d made up her mind which she favored. ‘He begin : ‘A-u, au ; r-o-r, Auror; a. Aurora ; B-o.r, bor, Aurora Boreal —’ Then he stopped and looked at the floor and steadied. “I jest,stood up. I was thet excited, for I knowd what was wrong. I seen tears in Hannah Cider’s eyes as she leaned for’d, not breathin’ ; I seen Jimison grin and know’d he remembered he left out th’ u and ’ud spell et sure jest as quick as he'd get a chance. I believed Quincy was going’ ter say a, and thet et was all up with him, an’ thet Hannah Ciders know’d who she fav- ored too late, fer shé wasn’t a’ girl ter break a greemen. **Then sudden a feller run in th’ door and yelled : Some uns run off with teacher Jimison’s horse an’ sleigh !”’ ‘You uns never seen sech a panic. Th’ weemen jumped up and yelled, th’ men jest piled out th’ door ; John Jimison climb- ed out th’ winder, an’ teacher Long drop- ped his spellin’ book an’ follered. Ter my surprise Quincy Muthersbaugh never mov- ed ; he jest stood there lookin’ at Hannah Ciders an’ smilin’, while she was gazin’ back, as red as a beet. I was gettin’ out th’ winder among th’ last an’ turned ’round ter see ef Quince was behind me; thet’s how I come ter notice et. I jest stopped an’ Jooked et hoth of ’em. For three min- utes them two stared et ‘each other an’ I stared et them, not knowin’ what ter make of et. Meantime the room was clear- ed. Outside we heard th’ sleigh bells ring- in’ as th’ fellers started off after th’ thieves; we heard John Jimison and teacher Long callin’ to em ter go in this an’ thet direc- tion ; we heard th’ weemen camplainin’ because they’d so many hev ter walk home. ‘Then th’ rear winder, right back of where Quincy was standin’, slid up an’ his young brother Sam stuck his head in, an’ when heseen th’ coast wus clear, whisper- ed : ‘I jest give th’ ’larm in time, Quince, didn’t I? T’ve hitched teacher Jimison’s horse right here behind th’ school howse, an’ you kin take her home jest as soon as th’ last of these here fools gits away.’ “Quincy smiled an’ said : ‘I thot you was never comin’ an’ I'd hev ter spell et out.’ “But th’ winder was shet down an’ his brother was gone. “Then he steps down off th’ platform an’ walks up ter Hannah Ciders, an’ says : ‘Th’ last syllable e-a-l-a-s.’ * ‘No,’ she says, quietlike, ‘et’s e-a-l-i-s. But thet ain’t no dffference.’ “I slipped out th’ winder an’ started home. But ten minutes later John Jimi- son’s horse and sleigh passed me on th’ road, an’ from what I seen I jedged et wouldn’t a done him much gogd, any- way, ef he had a spelled down Quincy Muthersbaugh.”’—New York Sun. His Bluff was Called. Reporter—That fellow who wanted his name kept out of the paper called in to- day. Oh, he was mad ! Editor—What about ? Reporter—It seems we kept it out. The Primary Election and County will meet at the regular places for holding the general elections, in their respective elec- tion districts, on Saturday, June 5th, 1897, to elect delegates to the county convention. Under the rules of the party the election p- m. stated time will meet in the court house, Convention. : The Democratic voters of Centre county will be opened at 3 p. m. and closed at 7 The delegates chosen at the above in Bellefonte, on Tuesday, June Sth, 1897, at 12 o'clock noon, and nominate one can- didate for jury commissioner and one can- didgge for county surveyor ; elect five dele- gates to the state convention to be held at Reading at the call of the executive com- mittee of the state central committee, and a chairman of the county committee to serve from January 1st. 1898, to January 1st, 1899 ; and, to transact such other busi- ness as may appear befor€ the convention Snow Shoe Twp. E. P.L. poy h Snow Shoe Twp. W. P.John T. Lucas Ch. Spring Twp., N. P..L. Taylor Twp...... Vinton Beckwith, Ch...... Hannah «“ “ Walker Twp. E. P........ Sol Peck, Ch... .] Nittany Worth will hold a township election this spring instead of precincts. David M. Whiteman will act as chair- “ 8. P..Sam’l Wayne,........ Osceola Mills, 2 < Patrick Hefteron, : id John Wayne, Redding Ch.....Snow Shoe: . C. Gilliland £ 4 T. Kelly “ Daniel Flannigan John Confer H. Wian, Ch........Bellefunte. J. 8. Yearick A. Hamilton S. P. W. H. Noll, Jr. Ch. Pleasant Gap. James Corl J. Adam Hazel. W. P. Phil F. Garbrick, Ch Bellefonte. Dommick Judge Abe Switzer ““ ““ 6“ “ 0“ 3 “ [1 . “ “ Samuel Hoover J.T. Merryman Union TWp-......... Chas. G. Hall, Ch........... Fleming te % 8. K. Emmerick Mark Hall “ “ “ “ ‘“ M.P. D.M. Whiteman Hublershurg “ W.P. Harvey Shaeffer, Ch Zion Twp.....A. J. Johnston, Ch....... Port Matilda Nore.—The three chairmen of Walker township man and the committeemen for the east and west recincts, will assist in holding this election. a BOYD MUSSER. +H. 8. TAYLOR, Chairman. SHIR, Secretary. He spelled it | as follows in the interest of the party. APPORTIONMENT OF DELEGATES. The number of delegates to which each election district is entitled, as approved and ratified by the Democratic county committee on the 3rd day of May, 1897, is ELECTION “ Centre Hall Milesburg B Millheim Bo Philipsburg, ‘ae | Boggs, N. Pp * EP, W.P Bureside. College Curtin... “ a. “ T Half Moon. Marion... M iles, E. } WwW, Patton. Penn. Potter, “ “ sh, N. $y Snow Shoe, « “ Bellefonte, N. 4x S a WW. WV, Howard Boro... Ferguson, I. te. Ww. Gregg, N. P.... a E P Haines, E. P.. “ 'W. Pp Fine N > Spring, rE vee DISTRICT. | Ww SW Boro oro.. TO.... FOF VOTE Ist w 2nd 3rd South Philipsburg.... State College Boro Unionville Boro. Benner, N. P.. $008.7 W. P “ R | wh i Taylor.. 1 Union.. 1 Nala: Vorth 1 Total 4.459 89 NO. OF “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ 6“ “ “ “ Burnside Tw “ Harris Twp.. . Howard Twp ; H uston Twp. “ “ “ “ Rush Twp. N. P.Wm. Frank, Ch......... Philipsburg. * P.E. Troy, se John Beck, v . ya Philipsburg Bor Bellefonte Boro... “ N Ww Millheim Boro......Sa « “ Unionville Boro.....L. “ «“« 3rd State College Boro J. “ “ A Benner Twp., S. P....Jno. E. P.. Ww. P..D, p..... Wm. Hipple, Ch...... Pine Glenn. iller, College Twp........J. A. g Ww Liberty Twp........J. « Marion Twp......... J. “ >» Pu J. L. Neff, Ch W. Miles Walker John Dunlap Louis McQu istion H. C. Crissman W. A. Sandoe, J. M. Goodh George Noll art Wm. Essington B. F. Kister E. E. Knarr H. R. Greist Wm. Keaters 1st W. J. Lukens, Ch. Philipsburg 2nd W. Ira Howe, Ch. Vv Albert Dress E .C. Howe, Frank Ch P. Howe, Harry Craine. A. A. Miller T. F. Kennedy Henry Noll, J. F. Heato! Austin Fetzer. Irvin Harvey, Chas. Lucas, Ezekiel Confer, F. Poorman, Ch.... Mileshurg. Ellis Kohlbecker.. James A. V. Daugherty. D. A. Grove. Elis Lytle, D. H. Kusterborder Gregg Twp. N. P.....Geo. Weaver, Ch.... Penns Cave. Fngard, Roush E. P...J. C. 6ondo, Ch......... Penn Hall. Emanuel Jno. Curtin Twp........N. J. McCloskey, Ch...... Ferguson Twp. E. P.W hy. H. B. Herring, F. M. Fisher. C. E. Royer, Harry Grove, C. N. Weaver, A. F. Bowe E. P...R. E. Stover, Ch..... Woodward, Tr, Henry Reinhart, Clair Kreamer, C. S. Cross, Wm. Lytle. reereseds A. Swnbb, Ch., J. K. Page, Philip H. Meyer, Robt. Confer, Ch......... Howard, A. M. Butler W. F. Leathers ...Henry Hale, Ct F. Craig, {FR Geo. Campbell, Ben Brown. J. F. Condo, H. 8, Yearick, Miles Twp. E. P..Dan’l Harter, Cl leceaas Jerome Meyer, Jerre Brumgard, J. A. Deatrick, J. F. Kern, Elmer Bierly, H. A. Detwiler, Jr. P. A. Sel ers, J. W. Biddle, W. W. Royer J. B. Fortney G. H. Emerick,Ch...Centre Hall, David Keller, Thomas Moore, Romola. . H. Fry, Ch. Pine Grove Ms. Jno. Dreiblebix, J. L. Murp W. P.S. Harpster, Jr. Ch.Gatesburg OFFICERS FOR HOLDING DELEGATE ELECTIONS, ..John Trafford, Ch.....Bel ‘ “ ®°W., Ed. Brown, Jr, Ch. “ a Ss. D. Gettig te £0 Chas. Brown, Jr. big £8 W. W. Geo. R. Meek, Ch, ts Centre Hall Boro...J. Witmer Wolf, Ch..Centre Hall Howard Boro.........Abe Weber, Ch............. Howard ie ¢ Joseph D. Diehl £4 4 John H. Wagner Milesburg Boro....Jas. B. Noll, Ch...........] Milcshurg “ t m'l Weiser, Jr., Ch... Millheim P. Brisbin, Ch.......... Fleming N. Krumrine, Ch State College S. Philipsburg Boro Henry Wilcox, Ch Philipsburg Benner Twp. N. P.L.C..Rerick, Ch......... Bellefoyte . Ishler Ch....... Bellefonte. H. A. Wagner, Boggs Twp. N. P...Henry Heaton, Ch.....Mileshurg. Roland. Rupp, Ch............ Oak Hall. . H. Tibbens, et W. P...Tno. Smith, Ch.....Spring Mis. Haines Twp. W. P..W. I. Winklebeck Ch... Coburn. Half Moon Twp,..... E. McAfee, Ch......Stornstown. “« Linden Hall. Julian, A. Bituer, Ch........Blanchard. Chaney Delong, WW. 0m, Ch.................. Waller. Wolf's Store. th W. P...Ed. Miller, Ch......... Centre Mills. M.P.CJ Cronse, Ch.......Rebersburg. Patton Twp... iis, D. L.-Meak, Oh.............. Waddle. Penn Twp............4 A. P. Zerby, Ch ....Sober. 3 : J.P aati 4 A. R. Alexander, Potter Twp. 8. P....J. F, Smith, Ch.............. Colyer. lefonte ‘ nary of each and every year. The regular rules of the Democratic party will govern the conduct of both primaries and conven- tion and for the benefit of our voters we append it herewith : ¢ RULES OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY OF CENTRE COUNTY. 1. The Democratic County Convention of Cen- tre county shall be composed of one delegate for every fifty Democratic votes polled at the presi- dential or gubernatorial election next preceding the convention. The allotment of delegates to the several election districts in the county shall he made by the standing committee of the county at its first meeting in every alternate year suceeed- ing the presidential or gubernatorial elections and shall be in proportion to the Democratic votes cast in each district at” such election, 2. The election for delegates to represent the different districts in the annual Democratic county convention shall be held at the usual place of holding the general election for each dis- trict on the Saturday preceding the second Tues- day of June in each and every year, beginning at three o'clock p. m. The delegates so elected shall meet in County Convention in the court house, at Bellefonte, on the Tuesday following at twelve o'clock p. m. 3. The said delegate clection shall be held hy an election hoard, to consist of the member of county committee for each district and two other Democratic voters thereof who shall be appointed or designated by the county committee, In case any of the persons xo constituting the board shall be absent from the place of holding the election for a quarter of an hour after the time appointed by Rule Second for the opening of the same, his or their place or places shall be filled by an elec- tion, to be conducted viva voea, by the Demo- ératic voters present at that time. 4. Every qualified voter of the district, who at the late general election voted the Democrati ticket, shall be entitled to a vote at the delegate election ; any qualified elector of the district who will pledge his word of honor to support the Democratic ticket at the next general election shall be permitted to vote at the delegate elec- tions. 5. The voting at all delegate elections shall be by ballot ; upon which ballotts shall be written or printed the name or names of the delegates voted for together with any instructions which the voter may desire to give the delegates. Each ballot shall be aon the person voting the same by a member of the election board, and by him deposited in a box or other receptacle provided for that purpose, to which no persons but mem- bers of the board shall have access. 6. No instructions shall be received or recog- nized unless the same he voted upon the ballot as provided in Rule Fourth, nor Ra such instrue- tions if voted upon the ballot be binding upon the delegates unless one-half or more of the ballots shall contain instructions concerning any office, the delegates elected at such election shall be held to be instructed to support the candidates having the highest number of votes for such office. 7. Each election board shall keep an accurate list of names of all persons voting at such elec- tions, when the list of voters together with a full and complete return of such election, containing an accurate statement of the persons elected dele- gates and all instruction voted, shall be certified by said board to the ounty convention upon printed blank to be furnished by the county con- vention. 8. Whenever from any district qualified Demo- cratic voters, in numbers equal to five times the delegates which such district has in the county convention, shall complain in writing of an un- due election, of false returns of delegates or of in- struction, in which complaint the alleged facts shall be specifically set forth and verified by the affidavit of one or more persons, such complaints shall have the right to contest the seat of such | delegates or the validity of such instructions, Such complaint shall be heard by acommittee of five delegates to be appointed by the president of the convention; which said committee shall proceed to hear the parties, their proofs and alle- gations, and as soon as may be report to the con- vention what delegates are entitled to seats there- in, and what instructions are binding upon such delegates. Whereupon the convention shall proceed immediately on the call of the yeas and nays to adopt or reject the report of the contesting parties ; in which call of the yeas and nays the names of the delegates whose seats are contested or whose instructions are disputed shall be omitted, 9. All delegates must reside in the district they represent. In case of absence or inability to attend substitutes may be made from citizens of the district. 10. Delegates must obey the instructions given them by their respective districts and if violated, it shall be the duty of the president of the conven- tion to cast the vote of such delegate or delegates in accordance with the instructions, and the dele- gate or delegates so offending shall be forth-with expelled from the convention, and shall not be eligible to any office or place of trust in the party for au period of two years. 11. Inthe convention a majority of all voters shall be necessary toa nomination, and no per- son's name shall be excluded from the list of can- didates until after the third ballot or vote when the person receiving the least number of votes, shail be omitted and struck from the roll, and so on at each successive vote until a nomination be made. 12. If-any person who is candidate for any nomination before a county convention shall be proven to have offered or pz2id any money or other valuable thing or made any promises of a consideration or reward to any delegate for his vote, or to any person with a view of inducing or securing the votes of delegates, or if the same shall be done by any other person with the knowl- edge amd eonsent of such_candidate, the name of such candidate shall be immediately stricken from the list of candidates ; or if such facts be ascertained after his nomination, he shall be struck from the ticket and the vacancy supplied: by a new nomination, and in either case sueh person shall be ineligible to any nomination by the convention or to an election as a delegate thereafter. And in case it shall be alleged after the adjournment of the convention that any can- didate put in nomination has been guilty of such acts or of any other fraudulent practice to obtain such nomination, the charges shall be investigat- ed by the county committee, and such steps taken as the good of the party may require. 13. If any delegate shall receive any money or other valuahle thing, or accept the promise of any consideration or reward to be paid, delivered or secured to him or to any person for such ecandi- date as an inducement for his vote, upon proof of the fact tothe satisfaction of the convention such delegate will be forth-with expelled, and shall not be received as a delegate to any further conven- tion, and shall be ineligible to any party nomi- nation. 14. Cases arising under the Eighth, Twelfth and Thirteenth Rules shall have precedence over all other business in convention until deter- mined. : : 15. That the term of the chairman of the coun. ty committee shall begin on the first day of Jan. 16. That the delegates from the several bor- oughs and townships be authorized, in conjunec- tion with the chairman of the county committee, to appoint the members of the committee for the various boroughs and townships. Florida’s New Senator. Stephen R. Mallory has been electedy . United States Senator from Florida, on th twenty-fifth Legislative ballot. Mr. Mal- lory, who will succeed Wilkinson Call, was born in November, 848. He served for a short time in the Confederate army, and afterward as a midshipman in the Confed- erate navy. He was graduated from the Georgetown College in 1869, was an in- structor there for two years, and in 1872 was admitted to the bar in Louisiana. . In 1874 he began the practice of law at Pensa- cola. After serving in both branches of the Legislature he was elected to Congress in 1890, and served two terms in the House. pig =z 7 One of Man’s Best Friends. i 1 A redent decision of the Supreme court | of Louisiana sustains the validity of an act | of the Legislature of that State recognizing dogs as personal property when placed upon the assessment rolls. In the course of the opinion the court made the following re- marks about dogs, as property : The very fact that they are without pro- tection of the criminal laws shows that property in dogs is of an imperfect ot qual- ified nature, and that they stand, as it were, between animals ferae naturae, in which, until subdued, there is no property, and domestic animals, in which the right of property is complete, They are not con- sidered as being upon the same plane with horses, cattle, sheep and other domestic an - imals, but rather in the category of cats, monkeys, parrots, singing birds and simi- lar animals kept for pleasure, curiosity or caprice. Unlike domestic animals, they are useful neither as beasts of burden, for draft nor for food. 3 In spite of what the court says the dog has proven of great value not only as a beast of burden, but for draft purposes and | for food, and wherever care has been taken | to train him for that purpose. man has found him a most valuable assistant. In | Holland and Belgium and in some districts of France the family dog is as much relied on and as highly valued as the horse is else- where. He is harnessed to the vehicle that- transports the farmer's produce to market. He works in the fields and gardens, tows boats on the canals and does a prodigious | amount of labor. In all the cities and | towns of those regions he is in evidence | everywhere, and such a factor in all indus- trial activity that it is difficult to see how the people would get along without him. | His intelligence and docility particularly | fit him for the tasks to which he is assign- | ed, and the economy of his maintenance as | well as his abilility to shift for himself ! makes him just the servant and beast of | burden these people need. % ot x In the Arctic regions men could not exist without him. He is in certain latitudes the sole beast of burden employed and the only one that could be employed. In all accounts of Arctic explorations we read of the use that is made of him in draw- ing the sledges of travelers overthe inter- minable ice and snow,and of how, when food | runs short, he is sacrificed to fill the larder. At various times many people have es- teemed the flesh of the dog a delicacy, and it is doubtless ag nutritious and palatable as the flesh of many animals who go to fur- nish our tables, and he is certainly as clean- ly in his habits as many of those animals the flesh of which is universally consumed. Many people have been so impressed with the usefulness of the dog asa draft an- imal in those countries where he is so em- ployed that they have favored the project of his universal employment as one that would improve conditions, everywhere. But in this country he will probably re- main what he has always been, simply the faithful pet of the watchman and the | hunter. In these capacities he has been known from the earliest dawn of history. In the most ancient sculptures that have been discovered the dog is represented, and it is siown that even then there were many varieties used for different purposes. Stud- ents of the progress of man concede that he has been of the greatest service in the estab- lishment of human society and that the first possessors of dogs for hunting were enabled by their aid to make the first sure step to- | wards civilization. #* When we consider all’ of-this ; when we recollect that he has been domesticated and | has been the servant and household , friend of man for ages, from the time he dwelt in caves until he lived in palaces, and when we consider how highly he is esteem- | ed by millions, it seems strange that in the | law he should be still classed partly asa wild animal in which there can be only a modified property by complying with cer- | tain regulations. There is not one of us | in a hundred who has not known dogs, with whose traits we were as well acquaint- ed as with those of any of our friends, and for whom we had miore respect and affec- tion than for many men that we knew. Literature is full of stories of their faith- fulness, their bravery and intelligence. Go into any company and relate an anec- dote ahout the intelligence of a dog and everybody will have a dozen of them to tell, many of them showing that the intel- ligence and sagacity of the animal is al- most human. . There is no animal, not even among those who go upon two legs, that is more grate- ful and appreciative of kindness ; there is none so long suffering, and there is none that so attaches himself to his master and who will stick as he does to him through thick and thin and through all the varying tides of fortune. If all the world besides frowns upon you, and if every vestige of fortune deserts you, you are still the same to your dog and sure of a welcome and greeting. Place one of them in charge of a child and he will fight an army in its de- fense. Set him to guard the house and it cannot be harmed as long as he has the- power to resist and to summon assistance. Place him upon the scent of game and- he will know no fatigue as long as he can as- sist in pointing out its haunts to his mas- ter. Train him to any service and he will die in its performance if need be. Once taught his duty, he knows no fear or falter- ing in its performance, and yet the courts class him, the most domestic of all, as oc- cupying only a sort of middle ground be- tween wild and domestic animals.— Pifts- burg Times. She Kuew. ‘‘Now, children,’’ said the school teach- er, ‘vou have just read the story about the little bird that fell in the spring and was drowned. Who can tell me what a spring is 2? Several bright little boys and girls held up their hands, and one was asked for her answer. “It comes before the Fourth of July," she said. .““Oh, no ; I do not mean the season,’’ ex- plained the teacher. “I 'nean the spring that the lictle bird was drowned in.”’ A little girl waved her hand frantically. “Well you may answer,’ said the teach- er “*A spring is water coming up out of the rround with a-health resort built up around it.’ 4 ——Don Cameron, of Pennsylvania, has given a horse valued at $15,000, to Presi- dent Diaz, of Mexico. The freight charges were $600 in gold. THE A B C oF IT.—A kidney education starts with : Backache meaus kidney ache, lame back means lame kidneys, weak back means weak kidneys, cure means Doan’s Kidney Pills. Read about the free dis- tribution in this paper, and call at F. Potts Green’s. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN, The sweet girl graduate bobs up serenely with the blossoming of the June roses, and not the ieast of her anxieties is what to wear on that memorable day when she feels she has left her school days behind her and life takes on a different character. Of course, the material must be white, and the more becoming and appropriate, though many India silks, challies and albatross will be worn with a view to utilizing them afterward for dressy house gowns. A gown designed especially for this purpose. Has a sweet simplicity that makes it singu- larly appropriate. The material is white French organdy, and has’ a most becoming bolero effect, arranged in' broad tucks, slightly gatliered at the left side from the shoulder down, where it fastens over the full Spencer waist underneath. The full- ness of the waist is gathered in at the waist- line and held with a crushed belt of wide white satin ribbon, which hangs in long ends to the bottom of the skirt. The graceful and much-worn mousquetaire sleeve is finished at the shoulder with three ruftled caps of organdy. Some women never acquire the knack of tying a bow-knot. In fact, many women do not, judging from the strange, upside- down, wrong-side-out affairs one sees in ribbons and sashes and honnet strings. The process is simplicity itself after it was once learned. Always to put the upper string over the under, and never the re- verse, is the whole thing in a nutshell. If this same upper string is again brought through the middle loop before pull- ing it smartly into place it will make the -unloosable knot which is necessary in shoe laces, for instance. It’s a fad of the up-to-date woman to be, or to affect to be, tremendously busy, to have every moment of the waking hours filled in, to rush from one engagement to another, and to condense in 24 hours the work of twice that number. What is the object of all this? Heaven knows, unless it is that no one woman shall boast that her social engagements exceed in number those of any other, for to confess that one is not in a mad rush from day to day is to acknowledge that one is not in the swim—humiliating admission for the progressive woman of the end of the | century. And who pays the piper for this continu- ous round of occupations and preoccupa- tions? Why, the woman herself and her family. Who does not know the oft-re- peated story, the tired-out wife and mother the irritable, fault-finding mistress and the hypereritical friend—the result of the effort to accomplish a multiplicity of trifles in a given time or period. And then the air of martyrdom which the over-fatigued woman assumes is not the least trying part of the ordeal which the family of the too energet- ic one must bear. She rides for instance, 20 miles on her bicycle when common sense should limit her to half that number. She comes home physically exhausted, and for the remainder of the day her expression of patient fatigue rivals that of an early martyr. Or during the house-cleaning period she condenses the labor of two days into one, and at nignt is so worn out and assumes so palpable an air of uncomplaining resigna- tion that the very sight of her is irritating to the last degree, and instead of sympathy she usually gets what she really deserves. a wholesome letting aloneness or a good i scolding for her foolish over-zealousness. What women really need to learn is that the life of a truly dignified, useful woman is not given up to this mad rush from one occupation to another ; that nothing good or lasting is done in haste, and that hurry is a fatal hindrance to the accomplishment of any work of real and permanent value. ‘Let. us leave hurry to slaves,’’ said the philosopher Emerson—a saying which should be blazoned in letters of gold over the door of the abode of every modern Mar- tha whose soul is troubled with many things. Miss Frances McHenry, who was admit- ted to the bar of Columbia county at Bloomsburg ong day last week, is the first woman lawyer in Central Pennsylvania, Judge Ikeler, in his remarks at the time of Miss McHenry’s admission, referred to this fact. Miss McHenry is 22 years of age and her tutelage in the law was had with Ike- ler & Ikeler, in thistown. She is a gradu- ate of the Muncy Normal School and Buck- nell University. She is an enthusiastic horse-woman, having spent her girlhood on her father’s farm at Exchange, Montour county. : The new snmmer sleeves are tucked in a variety of ways—some horizontally, others in fine tucks extending the entire length of the sleeve. Then there must he a frill or puff, an epaulet or fancy cuff to give the proper finish to the sleeve of silk or thin goods. Cloth sleeves have braid or button garniture. The untrimmed sleeve is slow- ly passing into that limbo to which the un- trimmed skirt has been reluctantly con- signed—the limbo reserved for passe fash- = ° = 8 A student of dressmaking, ata famous school in New York city, has a method of pressing seams which is most ingenious. She has taken a rolling-pin, split it in half so as to make a flat surface, then covered it it as one would an ironing board. It sup- plies just what is needed, a curving, smooth surface, but one which remains firm beneath the weight of the iron. A daisy wedding is a singularly appro- priate one, the daisy being a June blossom and is symbolic of the girl bride, being ‘‘pure white outside with a heart of gold.’ Besides nothing could he sweeter or dainti- er as a house or church decoration than huge loose bunches of this pretty flower and they are so easy to get ; they are very inexpensive. Have the bridesmaids’ bou- quets of them also. White organdy is the wedding gown par excellence for a girlish June bride. It is not as heavy as satin and its airiness makes it most becoming. When prettily trimmed with lace it makes a charming wedding | gown. The shower houquet is the latest. In this the flowers are arranged with stream- ers of ribbon or tulle to fall almost to the knees, there being a lot of pendant Hower? | below the bunch at the top. Watered silk poplin is once more in fashion cut into small checks in cream and brown, white and black, grav and white ‘and in other colors, such as dark blue and red or mauve and cream, is extremely smart. It will furnish very natty dresses when trimmed with velvet and embroidery, or, more novel still, with the metallic embroidery. It saw its brilliant service at the war days, and the belles of those days danced Vir- ginia reels gowned in its sheeny folds.