Demorvaic: Waidyuan BY P. GRAY MEEK. Ink Slings. —The Klondyke would be a popular field for the colonization of tramps. There are only three months in a year when they can risk a bath up there. —It will be in order for undertakers to set up a howl because the new tariff has made it possible for the trust to push the price of cigarettes up a few cents on a pack. —An edict has emanated from imperial sources in Morocco prohibiting the use of bicycles in that country. Old Sol evi- dently has a cinch on the scorching over there. —As it is said to be suicidal to attempt to reach the Klondyke, via the Chilkoot pass, now those who do get through may be said to have taken the gold cure for their yellow fever. —Government by injunction has begun in Pennsylvania. The liberty of the min- ers has been taken from them and this great and glorious free country has taken one more hop, skip and jump towards a moneyed plutocracy. —Talk about the possibility of war be- tween Spain and the United States. Why it has taken WEYLER two years to demon- strate to his government that he is a fail- ure, while the veriest school hoy in the United States saw it long ago. —1In the Sunday edition of a Philadel- phia newspaper, there was published, re- cently, a long list of inventions to prevent absent-mindedness. Singularly enough the virtue in getting married was not even suggested to the bachelors troubled in this way. ——The Harrisburg News, the bright daily that has grown so rapidly as the representative of the union printers of the capitol city, was two years old on the 12th inst. The second anniversary was cele- brated by an issue of a forty-eight page industrial edition. —The business of supplying human dummies to London stores has become quite a remunerative one for agencies on the other side. It is no job to find them over there, you know. All that don’t get American heiresses are necessarily open for any kind of an engagement. —The fact that the mind of the coming Democratic state convention is already practically made up on the advisability of re-iterating the Chicago platform is evi- dence that the Democrats of Pennsylvania are not ready to eschew a single utterance that they fought for last fall. —TERRENEE V. POWDERLY has been made commissioner of immigration and the organized labor of the United States has received a rebuff at the hands of the administration. It will be serving a dual purpose to wish that TERRY will have nothing, or at least very little, to do dur- ing his term. The fewer immigrants the better. —This thing of cities like New York, Chicago, Boston and Philadelphia baiting country merchants for the purpose of sell- ing them goods seems to be very popular and will undoubtedly continue so until the merchants wake up to the fact that for every cent in entertainment they receive they pay just that much extra for the goods they purchase. It is the old flim-flam in a new way. —So Mr. JAMES ISRAEL is of the opinion that ‘‘Governor HASTINGS is too smart to enter the lists with QUAY for a seat in the United States Senate’’ and he puts his plaster further into the gubernatorial eye by asserting that such a contest could only end in the defeat of both the great (?) bosses. It is strange that Jim didn’t dis- cover some of this smartness when the Governor tried to down QUAY in ’95. —The duel between the Count of TURIN and Prince HENRI of Orleans resulted rather disastrously to the latter. The two youngsters went to cutting one another with swords all because the Orleanist made a truthful, though slightly uncom- plimentary remark about the Italian army officers. Duelling has become almost a lost art, yet there are a few who still ape the semi-civilized customs of antique royal- ty. —The Governor must be imagined to possess all the versatility of the noted Italian artist who astounded American theatre goers last season by impersonating all the characters in a well presented drama. The latest turn the newspapers would have him do is be a candidate for Congress in this district. It appears like quite a drop from a ‘‘go” at the United States Senatorship, and as there is no danger of his getting either the Pittsburg Dispatch traduces (?) the ambition of a great (?) statesman by even intimating such a thing. —The action of the English press in try- ing to besmirch TEN EYCK, the Worcester, Mass., boy who won the Diamond sculls at the Henley regatta, is being roundly censured by sportsmen all over the world. “The English spirit of fair play’’ seems to exist only in mythology, as they have given so many illustrations of baby-tactics of late. Because TEN EYCK is the honor- able son of a professional oarsman the CL enacra \ yyy _VOL.42 STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION. BELLEFONTE, PA., AUG. 20, 1897. NO. 32. = How We Can Have Harmony. | It is neither necessary to indite long edi- torials nor to submit to lengthy inter- views, to prove to any one the necessity for or the advantage of Democratic har- mony in the State, if there would be Demo- cratic hope. To secure complete Demo- cratic harmony should be a very easy mat- ter. Simply let men who pretend to be Democrats Je Democrats and harmony is secured. Our late enemies, the ‘‘gold Democrats,’ who at this time profess the greatest desire for harmony and who so lately have be- come impressed with its benefits and its advantages, have a perfect right to elect to the coming state convention all the dele- gates they can. In that convention the delegates elected by them will be accorded the right to the fullest expression of opin- ion ; to advocate any line of policy they deem proper and to secure the adoption of any platform of principles that a majority of that convention may believe to be right and timely. If they succeed in impressing their views and their line of policy upon the party, every Democrat within the limits of the State will acquiesce in his action and will give earnest and hearty support to the ticket nominated. Harmony will thus be secured because the minority will bow to the will of the majority. On the other hand, if the ‘‘gold Demo- crats’’ go to Reading with a desire for harmony, determined to act as Democrats, and willing to do just what they would expect others to do in case their ideas of a platform and policy were adopted, they will submit to such action as the convention may see proper to take, and will give honest support to the ticket named, and thus harmony will be secured. So that, after all, the power to insure harmony is in the hands of those now so seemingly anxious for it. They have only to be Democrats, recognizing the basic prin- ciples of Democracy—the right of the ma- Jority to rule, and they will have just what they now profess to want so anxiously. Relative Price of Wheat and Silver. Much talk is being heard from the gold- ites just now about the rise in the price of wheat and the decline in that of silver. They speak of it as if it proved something that militates with the claim of the silver advocates that the low price of wheat had an association with the low price to which silver had been brought by demonetization. For example, our gold-bug contemporary, the Philadelphia’ Times, gloats over the fact that ‘‘the price of wheat continues to advance steadily until it is rapidly ap- proaching the dollar mark,” and that while this is going on, ‘‘the price of silver continues to decline steadily until it has nearly reached the point of making our standard silver dollar worth 40 cents.” This separation in the price of wheat and silver, one going up while the other is going down, the Times thinks should con- found the ‘‘blatant demagogues’”’ who have made the farmers believe that the price of wheat was low in consequence of the depreciation in the value of silver, thereby ignoring, as the Zimes claims, ‘‘the inexorable law of supply and demand, which teaches that silver, wheat and other products will be cheap when abundant and dear when scarce.” In fumbling around for something ex- planatory of this separation in the price of wheat and silver, whereby to confute the contention of the silver advocates that the prices of farm products and silver keep company, our gold-bug contemporary gets hold of the law of supply and demand, which, in this case, answers excellently as an explanation, without, however, strengthening the goldite argument. At this time there is a shortage of wheat in the foreign markets. The farmers of this country are called on to supply this deficiency, and this demand, together with the assistance rendered in bullying the price by the speculators, has given wheat a market value. much ahove what it has regularly been for some years past. But is it going to keep at that price perma- nently after this unusual foreign demand has ceased ? When this exceptional defi- ciency abroad has been supplied, and the gamblers have stopped wrestling with each other in the Chicago wheat pit, will not this cereal be seen sinking down again to its price in the market which has heen so long maintained relatively to the value of silyer ? There can scarcely be a doubt that this will be the case. It will not be long be- fore the Times will see wheat down again to figures which are its inevitable price, together with low prices for all other farm products, as a consequence of the depre- ciation of silver caused by its demonetiza- ‘“‘upper-crust,”” who are accustomed to | tion. | meet at Henley every year to measure their skill on the water, have made a great ——1It is quite probable that by the time | ey. . 8 adoo of having been compromised by a | the striking coal miners get through with contest with such a democratic character. | the injunctions the Republican courts have The young American is an amateur, pure and simple, he defeated them all in a fair and square race and it is to his credit if he made the English ‘‘upper-crust’’ as soggy as the under crust of a three day old huckle- berry pie. issued, to restrain them from exercising their constitutional rights, they will real- ize the efforts made by the Democrats last fall to prevent just such outrages when they declared, through the Chicago plat- he, and others similarly ‘affected, can dis: form, against ‘government by injunction.” Our Goldite Brethren. We sympathize with those so-called sound money Democrats who followed Mr. CLEVELAND in his bolt from the Demo- cratic ranks, and now want to get back again, but won’t come except on their own terms. Notwithstanding ‘their escapade we still have a fraternal feeling for them, just as we would for brethren who had left the family roof-tree and, having made fools of themselves by going away, would like to return to the old homestead. There is room in the old party and a hearty welcome for those who strayed away, if they come back in the right spirit, but the glad hand can’t be extended to JEFFERSONIANS like BENJAMIN C. POTTS, of Delaware county, who, in speaking of the Democrats that stood by the party can- didates and party principle in the last presidential campaign, scornfully terms them ‘‘the heterogeneous elements that en- dorsed the monstrous perversion of Demo- cratic faith put forth by the Chicago plat- form.”’ Mr. Ports’ language shows the effects of his being in bad company. Had he not allowed Mr. CLEVELAND to lead him off among the goldbugs of Wall street and the bankers who have grown rich and arrogant from the profits of gold loans, he would not call that plank in the Chicago plat- form which declared for the money of the constitution and the currency of JEEFER- soN and JACKSON, ‘‘a perversion of Demo- cratic faith.”” It must be from his bad association that he contracted the idea that the platform declaration in defence of local self government and in condemnation of ‘‘government by injunction,’’ was not in strict conformity with the Democratic faith as enunciated and maintained by the fathers of the party. Maybe it is the clause in the platform which denounced | public spoliation by monopoly tariffs that excites Mr. PorTs’ condemnation, for it would not be surprising if his association with gold bugs should make him friendly to the trusts and other monopolies that profit from tariff taxation. It is evident that something that has affected Mr. PorTs’ views has greatly warp- ed his Democratic principles. But still if card these erroneous notions, and get back on solid Democratic ground, they may again train with the party that was so heroically led by WILLIAM J. BRYAN in the last campaign, and is bound to be vic- torious on the principles of the Chicago platform. Government by Injunction. If there is any plank in the last Demo- cratic national platform that more than any other calls for re-iteration, and should be made more emphatic, it is the plank that denounces government by injunction. That declaration of the Democracy at Chicago was called forth by encroachment upon the constitutional rights of the peo- ple. The constitution guarantees to every citizen the right of being tried by a jury in all cases in which the charge may effect his life, liberty or property. This right had been violated in one of the courts of the land, which set a precedent under which the citizen may be subjected to an unconstitutional process that sets aside the trial by jury and authorizes his imprison- ment upon the mere injunction of a judi- cial officer. The dangerous precedent set in the DxBss case, when that person was denied a jury trial and condemned to imprisonment by an order issued from the bench, has borne its fruit in the arbitrary action of a court in West Virginia against the poor half-starved miners who are asking for an increase of wages. Those strikers had not disturbed the peace ; they had committed no act of vio- lence ; they were doing nothing which they could be lawfully prohibited from doing, when the influence of their wealthy and more powerful employers induced judge JACKSON to issue an injunction that was intended to make criminals of them for ex- ercising a right that constitutionally be- longed to them. When it is observed that this is a grow- ing evil which threatens to destroy the right of trial by jury and this abuse of legal power is designed chiefly for the op- pression of the poorer and more defence- less class, who are thereby made easier victims of predatory wealth, the Demo- crats should repeat their declaration against “government by injunction’ with increas- ed emphasis. ——One of the strongest reasons the ad- vocates of the endorsement of the Chicago platform by the Reading convention will have to present, is the fact that it con- demns ‘‘government by injunction.” Just now the party that would fail to record its condemnation of such usurpation of power by the courts as is to be seen every day throughout the districts affected by the coal miners strike, would meet with about the same kind of a public statement that the apologists for the acts of the PINKER- TON detectives during the Homestead | strikes of 1892 did. | The ‘Jeffersonian’ Prodigals, There appears to be extraordinary anxie- ty on the part of the gold Democrats, or so called JEFFERSONIANS, concerning the principles that will be set forth as the basis of the Democratic state campaign. They express it as their conviction that silver should be entirely dropped, and as little as possible said in endorsement of the Chicago platform. If this is done they will he willing to give the party their val- uable assistance in chastising the Republi- cans for their corrupt state administration and profligate legislation, and for the roh- bery which they have allowed the trusts and other monopolies to practice upon the American people. Giving these gold Democrats credit for their good intentions in this matter, we are, nevertheless, constrained to question their modesty. Isn’t it rather cheeky for a few thousand bolters to ask nearly a balf million of Democrats to discard their prin- ciples as the only condition upon which they (the bolters) will be willing to come back to the party fold ? Among the most prominent of these principles is that relating to silver. It is eminently Democratic, as it is based on the constitution and is in accord with the monetary doctrines and practices of JEF- FERSON and JACKSON, hoth of whom fav- ored a currency consisting equally of silver and gold. Besides nothing has occurred since last year to show that the Democratic contention for free silver in the BRYAN campaign was fallacious. The business of the country continues depressed under the effects of gold monometallism, and even a Republican President has sent com- missioners abroad to ask European govern- ments to allow us to take advantage of bi- metallism. In addition to the absence of any reason why the Democrats of Pennsylvania should renounce free silver to placate the ‘JEFFER- SONIANS,’’ isn’t it a little too much for the handfull of Democratic goldites to demand that the great body of the party, by dis- carding the Chicago platform, should admit that they were the repudiators, anarchists and enemies of the national credit and honor that they were represented to be both by the followers: of Mr. CLEVELAND and’ the hirelings of MARK HANNA. It is desirable, or at least not objectional, to haye the ‘‘JEFFERSONTANS’’ back in the Democratic fold, but they should not ex- pect to get back on the terms they propose. Wouldn't it be more becoming for them to come back as repentant prodigal, without expecting much veal to be offered them on their return ? A Strong Indicator. The recent special election in the con- gressional district in Indiana that was represented by the deceased judge HOLMAN, teaches a lesson which should make the Democrats stand firmly to the principles they maintained in last year’s contest. With free silver as the issue last year HoLMAN was elected by a majority of about 800. With the same issue this year GRIFFITH, as the Democratic candidate in the district, is elected by a majority of 1,152. The fight was made on the same lines that divided the parties a year ago. The doctrines of the Chicago platform were directly involved. So great a desire was entertained by the Republicans to defeat the Democratic candidate on the silver question that some of the ablest gold champions of that section were brought in to stump the district. The result has been a decided gain in the majority for free silver and the principles of the Chicago platform. It was scarcely necessary to have such a confirmation of the fact that the doctrines upon which the Democrats made their fight last year have lost none of the sup- port which they then received. There are strong reasons why they should have gained in the confidence and support of the peo- ple, these reasons being so obvious that there should be no hesitation in putting those doctrines forward in the state con- tests this year. ——The New York Zribune’s literary epicure has turned up his nose at ‘““The Christian,’’ the latest chef-d’cuvre in fiction by HALL CAINE, and insists thatit isa mere magic lantern show of the veracities | of life and that the leading characters are aught but puppets, not akin to nature and not calculated to arrest cultured attention. Like his ‘‘Manxman’ and ‘‘Deemster,’’ ‘The Christian’’ might be called a peculiar work. Simple in the manner of telling an intensely interesting and sad story of the hypocrisy of life in a great city like Lon- don it easily appeals to the most intelligent class of readers. And so faras the Zvi- bune’s allusion to the ‘‘depressing nature’’ of the humorous passages is concerned we are quite convinced that no more genuine, nor purer wit has appeared for a long while than the letters of GLORY QUAYLE teem with. -——~NSubscribe for the WATCHMAN. Gold and Silver. A. E. Kitson in the Guardian. Sir,—Lieutenant Colonel Dolphin’s let- ter in yesterday’s *‘Guardian’’ wisely calls the attention of the public to the bimetal- lic question, which undoubtedly requires prompt action and the united support of all who are interested in the growth and development of trade. Surely, manufacturers whose profits year by year ave declining ; landlords whose lands are mortgaged at excessive rates of interest and who find it difficult to collect rents ; farmers who have to sell at falling vrices all their products and are unable to lay anything by after paying rent and taxes ; the working classes, dependent upon manufacturers and employers generally ior a livelihood, who long to see better days when they can obtain higher wages, free from strikes and lockouts, live in better houses, give to their families some of the luxuries of this world, and leave behind them a sufficiency for widow and orphans ; the unemployed, who have a commodity (labour, the most perishable but the most valuable of all commodities) which if not instantly disposed of or utilized is lost and gone forever ; the investor and capitalist whose funds are tied up in securities and investments that are adversely affected by every movement of gold from one capital to another, and by every war scare, as well as every fluctuation in trade—surely all these will join heartily in a movement to rehabilitate silver, and thereby retard the absorption and the monopoly of the money of the realm by the bankers and money- lenders, who toil not and produce nothing better than bankrupts and paupers, who wield a mightier influence than a Ciesar, who defy Goverments and enforce submis- sion to their will.: Thomas Jefferson said ‘he believed bank- ing institutions to be more dangerous to the liberties of the people than standing armies.”’ Probably no greater question ever came before the public ; the longer it is neglected the more difficult its solution becomes. It therefore behoves its support- ers to speak out in unmistakable language, for we find arrayed against us not only the money lords but also the London press, which seems to be a mere apologist for the single gold standard. Will the people for ever submit to the protection of one com- modity to the detriment of all others? And will they allow themselves to he misled by such catch phrases as ‘‘honest money,” ‘sound money,’ &e., as frequently used by the gold monopolists, who oppose every- thing that tends to cheapen their commodi- ty or to open the people’s eyes to its gross injustice ? Let the people see to it that at the next elections no man. ic el Weed to Parliament, be he Liberal, Radical, Tory, or Unionist, unless he is heartily in sym- pathy with the remonetization of silver. Then we may see the idle hands employed at remunerative wages constantly, the standard of living, together with the whole social fabric, raised to a higher plane, and the complete overthrow of the world’s greatest tyrant—gold monometallism,— which has chained India down to a pro- longed state of barbarism and retarded the advancement of civilization and Christian- ity for a quarter of a century throughout the world. Manchester, England, Rather Hard on the Soldiers. From the Bellefonte Patron. When Gov. D. H. Hastings and his financial advisers were anxiously casting about to ascertain where appropriations might be scaled down with the least detri- ment to the common interest of the State, it is a marvel they did not think of the munificent amount set apart, annually, for the N. G. P. It occurs to us that it would have stood a handsome cut without any serious loss to the morals or integrity of the State. None but the fellows that fol- low up the encampments and furnish the beer and whiskey, would have complained. Bryan to Stump Ohio. He and Others Will Speak for the Cause of Silver. CorLuMBUS, Aug. 16.—It is now definite- ly settled that Wm. Jennings Bryan will make a series of speeches in behalf of the Ohio Democratic state and legislative tickets. Senators Jones, of Nevada, and Jones, of Arkansas; Congressman H. F. Bartine, Charles A. Towne, national sec- retary of the silver forces; John R. Sovereign and other labor leaders have also accepted invitations, and will stump the state for McLean and Chapman. The Democrats believe that a victory for silver in Ohio this year would be of great significance, and would be construed by the nation as a rebuke on the part of the people of McKinley’s own state of the policy of his administration. As Allen O. Myers stated in the letter which he sent out to the country editors, asking them to accept his campaign literature, the campaign on the part of the Democrats is to be conducted on the still-hunt plan until the speech-making campaign is open- ed, about the middle of September, and then an aggressive campaign is to be made. It is said that Governor Bushnell is to be forced to either accept or decline an invitation to meet the Democratic candi- date for Governor in joint debate. Lycoming County Democrats. By Resolution They Call on William Harrity to Re- sign. WILLIAMSPORT, Pa., Aug. 17.—At the Democratic county convention to-day Na- than Bryon was nominated for jury com- missioner. The freesilver wing ruled the convention, and among the resolutions was the following : ‘We call upon William F. Harrity to re- sign the position which he now holds as Democratic national chairman from Penn- sylvania. He has declared his antagonism to the principals of onr prrty; he is no long- er in sympathy with our organization, and he should no longer be permitted to par- ticipate in our counsels. We therefore in- struct our delegates to the state convention to vote in favor of any resolution which may be offered, which shall provide for fill- ing the position of national committeeman | by a sincere and loyal! Democrat. Spawls from the Keystone. —S. A. Baer has been elected prineipal of the Harrisburg high school. —The Mt. Gretna agricultural society opens its eighth annual exhibition to day. —The famous Bucktail regiment will hold a reunion at Smethport, August 19th, and 20th. —The residence of John Shiertrum, at Ta- maqua, was struck by lightning and badly damaged. —Struck by a Lehigh valley express train at Mauch Chunk, Peter Behan was instantly killed. —While picking coal at Mahanoy plane, Schuylkill county, Mrs. Joseph Kane had her head cut off by a train. —The Bethlehem iron company has been awarded a government contract for five big gun cartridges at $28,560 each. —At Pittsburg, August 24th, the national council of the Daughters of Liberty will meet for a three days’ session. —The old No. 3 Hazleton breaker of the Lehigh Valley coal company, which for some time has heen abandoned, is to be reopened. —A verdict of murder in the second degree has been rendered against John Waltz, who killed Jacob Lemon, in Forest City, Susque- hanna county. —The one hundred and seventieth aunni- versary of the founding of the Moravian church at Bethlehem was celebrated Sunday with impressive services. There are 380 defendants, a larger number than ever before, on the trial list for the Lancaster county criminal court, which opened its August term Monday. —Clinton Bossard, charged with the theft of a bicycle, fell into the hands of officers at Stroudsburg, Monroe county, just as he jumped through a window to escape arrest. —Mabel Lambert, 17 year old daughter of Edward Lambert, of Hellertown, died of pa- ralysis of the heart, last Friday night, from over exertion while learning to ride a bicycle. —Thomas Binner, while watching a fight at Kleinfeltersville, Lebanon county, was ac- cidentally wounded in the breast by one of the combatants, named Leininger, who aimed at his antagonist. —While temporarily insane, David Brad- ley, of Austin, Potter county, slashed his throat with a razor and died shortly after- wards. He was 70 years old and was a well known shoemaker of that place. —On their way home from a dance hall on the Diamond addition, near Hazleton, Con- stable Tague Gallagher and Tony Matz were fired upon and slightly wounded by a for- eigner, who is now under arrest. —Mary Gormon, 17-year-old daughter of William Gorman, of Philadelphia, fell from her bicycle while riding down a hill at Dela- ware Water Gap and suffered concussion of the brain, which, it is feared, will cause her death. —Harry Beach, of Jersey Shore, was jailed Saturday, charged with making threats and attempting to kill Charles Kissell, of Pine Creek township. On the night of August 11th, Beach is accused of throwing an axe through the window in the bedroom occu- pied by Mr. and Mrs. Kissell. —A horse valued at $200, belonging to Ir- vin Gleason, was killed at Gleasonton Wednesday evening. The crank of a wind- lass was suddenly released, and flew back striking the animal a terrific blow on the shoulder, breaking the bones and lacerating the flesh. To end its sufferings the animal was shot. —Back pension money to the amount of $1,344, allowed the late Mrs. Emeline Nickel, of Montgomery, has been retained by the government on account of her death. She had been dropped from the pension rolls, but had made application again. Notice of the allowance was received at Montgomery about two weeks after her death. Last week, while A. Maynard, of Williams- port, was visiting friends at Big Run, a grey eagle swooped down and settled in the lawn of William Irwin. A neighbor hastily pro- cured a gun and shot the large bird. It measured flve feet, two inches and a half from tip to tip. The eagle is now being stuffed. It will be mounted and will be kept as a trophy. —The Blair county Democratic convention met in Altoona on Saturday afternoon and nominated this ticket: For sheriff, Frank McCloskey, of Hollidaysburg ; prothonotary, Thomas V. Taylor, of Altoona ; poor direc- tor, Daniel McCann, of Newry; jury com- missioner, Charles B. Adams, of Altoona; Delegates to the state convention, A. V. Dively, Wm C. Fletcher, James Hartford and James Condrin, all of Altoona, and John Watson, Tyrone. For county chairman, R. A. Henderson, of Altoona, was chosen. The Chicago platform was endorsed, and Leader Harrity was denounced. — About 400 grangers from the country dis- tricts of Blair county picniced at Lakemont park last Thursday. In the forenoon Prof. John Hamilton, deputy secretary of agricul- ture and author of the Hamilton road bill, spoke to the grangersat a meeting in the theatre on "The Hard Times and Who is to Blame?’ at 2 o'clock there was more speech- making in the theatre. Lt. T. M. Fleck, of Sinking Valley, presided. The speakers were Attorney Geo. W. Plummer, of Chica- go; R. S. Seeds, of Hundred Springs, and Col. James F. Weaver, editor and proprietor of The Patron, published at Milesburg, Centre county. Professor Hamilton again made an address in the afternoon. —Surgeon General Weyman has tele- graphed the Pennsylvania Board of Health for particulars regarding the death of cattle and persons reported to have resulted from anthrax germs brought in hides from China to a tannery at DuBois, Pa. The creek which runs by the tannery is said to have be- come infected by the germs. Surgeon Gen- eral Weyman says that a similar case was reported two years ago from Bosbury, Pa., but it was discovered that the death both of men and animals had resulted from fly bites. The flies fed upon the decaying flesh on the hides and communicated the poison to the men and beasts which they bit. The sur- geon general thinks it probable that the deaths at DuBois may be placed to similar causes.